Showing posts with label benefits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label benefits. Show all posts

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Physician Assistants and Medical Scribes

Physician Assistants and Medical Scribes

The word scribe is Latin for scribere, which means "to write." A scribe has been known historically for recording events, making written copies of documents, and more recently, "transcribing" word for word. Medical scribes have emerged most recently in response to the extensive use of EMR into clinical practice from widely used handwritten and dictation methods. 

What Role do Medical Scribes Have in Healthcare?

Medical practices, hospitals, and typically lots of emergency departments hire medical scribes to relieve the providers unequipped with rapid typing skills or who cannot simply find their way around on EMR software. A medical scribe serves to record the actions and words spoken as they occur. Scribes cannot implement their own observations into the medical record. The scribe documents the activities of the provider as they occur and must include the name and signature of the provider who performed the encounter. The provider is required to attest of his/her presence during the encounter, verifying they have reviewed the scribe's documentation and the accuracy. The provider must also sign and date the encounter. 

What are the Benefits of Medical Scribes? 

Sunday, February 2, 2014

2013 AAPA Salary Report Review

The 2013 American Academy of Physician Assistants Salary Report, A Review


It's important to stay updated on the salary of a PA, specifically PAs in the field you plan to go into. This can have positive or negative effects on your future and could eventually enable you to single out the speciality, subspecialty, or practice setting you choose for yourself. This salary report also helps PAs ready to go into practice negotiate the best compensation package, hourly rates, salary rate, bonus packages, productivity measures, and benefits packages available. But this salary report isn't all about salary, it also talks about schools, coursework, and other information about becoming a PA you might find useful along your journey. Remember, this is just a review, so I'll just highlight a few that I think are cool and important, but if you want to see more, you'll need to purchase a membership. Lets get started!

The first part of the Salary Report is on PA Facts - this is basic information not regarding salary you might find useful.
Table 1. Table featured in AAPA Annual Survey 2013. This
particular table features the area of medicine and surgery
PAs work in by percentage. 

  1. The average PA program takes 26 months to complete; nearly all award master's degrees
  2. 93,000 certified PAs work in every medical and surgical setting across the country
    1. 37.5% practice in a hospital setting
    2. 38.1% work in a  group practice or solo physician office
    3. 24.4% work in community health centers, freestanding surgical facilities, nursing homes, school or college based facilities, industrial settings, or correctional institutions
  3. Each year, a PA treats around 3,500 patients
  4. A PA writes approximately 2,600-5,200 prescriptions each year. [That's about 50-100/week!]

Salary Report

This report was collected by a voluntary survey released online to AAPA members and non-members between March-July 2013. An astonishing 18,000 PAs responded, reporting valuable information about those working more than 32 hours/week for their primary clinical employer. The information is also presented in such a way that divides PAs into two categories: PAs with a base salary only and PAs with bonuses in addition to their base salary.