Assignment One February 13, 2016 Physician Assistant vs. Registered Nurse
Relevant Background Information: The observations for this Assignment One analysis were taken place in different settings to help determine the differences between a Physician Assistant and a Registered Nurse. For the first observation, I observed a video on a Physician Assistant/YouTube blogger, Lianne. This was a career chat video on how she became a Physician Assistant and about her profession being a PA. The second observation was taken place at West Forsyth Pain Management office where Amy Berry PA was observed during her normal day at work to help determine what a Physician Assistant how a PA works during the day. Amy graduated from Wake Forest University for her bachelors degree and for PA School. For the last observation Wendy Wrenn RN, my mother, was observed. Wendy is a Registered Nurse for Winston Salem Gynecology and CareSouth Homecare but for this observation, she was observed at Winston Salem Gynecology. Observing these different settings not only were to distinguish how a different settings work but, to distinguish how a Registered Nurse and Physician Assistant are different from each other.
Actresses: Actors are people who are apart of a figured world. The people I observed for the observations are the actors within the figured world of the healthcare field. These actors were chosen for the observations because they represent the figured world of healthcare occupations. Lianne: Lianne is an Urgent Care Physician Assistant in North Carolina. She graduated from UNC Chapel Hill in 2004 with a Bachelors of Science in Radiologic Experience and graduated from PA School in 2008 from Duke University. Lianne does a good job at explaining the requirements needed for PA school and giving a gist of what Physician Assistants do. Amy Berry, PA-C: Amy is a Physician Assistant for West Forsyth Pain Management Center who graduated from Wake Forest University. She graduated in the top of her class at Wake when she received her bachelors and in PA School. Amy used to be a PA in at a Breast Cancer Center but now works with at a pain management facility. She was observed during her normal day at work to help distinguish exactly what a Physician Assistant does. Wendy Wrenn, RN: Wendy is a Registered Nurse for CareSouth Homecare and Winston-Salem Gynecology. She graduated from Forsyth Technical Community College with her Registered Nursing degree in 1997. For this observation, she was observed at Winston Salem Gynecology. It was important to observe Wendy to help classify what a Registered Nurse in comparison to a Physician Assistant
Artifacts: These are items that are a significant part to the actresses listed above which are apart of the figured world of the healthcare field. Stethoscope: In order to be a PA or an RN, one must have specific medical tools to help determine their vitals. A stethoscope is used to determine ones heart rate. A
Rohdina Harriott 2/21/16 11:37 AM
Comment [1]: Your overall assignment one, was well thought out and doesn't seem to be rushed. Everything looked as if it was taken time on. I learned valuable information that was actually beneficial to me. Very organized. Roberto Vargas 2/21/16 11:33 AM Comment [2]: Great job on the overall assignment! very interesting learning a little bit of both careers. Zachary Stewart 2/21/16 11:07 AM Comment [3]: Overall I would give this paper an A+. I was super difficult for me to find anything negative to say to this paper. Good job on the assignment! Rohdina Harriott 2/20/16 3:35 PM Comment [4]: Background info did exactly as it should have. I felt as though just by reading your background information, I would go into your observations knowing exactly what to expect. Great on clarity.
Zachary Stewart 2/21/16 10:57 AM
Comment [5]: The background information and artifacts were super informative. I feel like this gave me a good insight on what to expect from this paper. Good job.
Assignment One Samantha Sealey, 2015, pg. 2
Physician Assistant or a Registered Nurse will always have this significant artifact with them at all times Planner: This is also is a significant artifact of a Physician Assistant and a Registered Nurse. A planner is very helpful to keep track of patients throughout the day and to have a to do list to make sure either profession doesnt forget anything important for their patients or work.
I. Observations Observation One: For this observation, I observed a career chat YouTube video on Lianne about her experience becoming a Physician Assistant then answered questions from her social media about PAs or PA School.
4:15 minutes: Lianne is an Air Force wife, mom, Physician Assistant, a YouTube blogger, and is actually lives in North Carolina. She graduated from UNC Chapel Hill in 2004 with a Bachelor of Science in Radiologic Experience and became an x-ray tech. Lianne was a x-ray tech for a little over a year before she realized she didnt want to be an x-ray tech for the rest of her life so, she went back to school. Lianne decided she wanted to go to med school so; she took prerequisite classes at UNC Chapel Hill and bought an MCAT prep book. When taking her MCAT test for med-school, Lianne realized then she didnt want to become a doctor either. She then began researching different occupations and came across a Physician Assistant. From then she started shadowing one of her colleagues at the ER where she worked. Once Lianne finished her prerequisites she applied to three PA schools: Duke University, George Washington University, and Wake Forest University. She got denied from GWU, waitlisted from WFU, and then she became accepted to Duke University. Lianne started Dukes Physician Assistant School in 2006 and graduated in 2008. Dukes PA program is 24 months long but, other program could be anywhere from 2-3 years long. Once Lianne graduated, she first worked as a PA in orthopedic surgery in Virginia but then had to move to Texas because her husband is in the Air Force. In Texas, she worked in pain management but didnt really like it all that much. Lianne and her family moved back to North Carolina where she is now an Urgent Care PA in a local hospital.
13:00 minutes: From this point on, Lianne answered questions that she received on social media about PAs or PA school. PA schools definitely look at everything about each person that applies, more than just their GPA. They are interested in a well-rounded person with an above average GPA and the required amount of clinical hours and shadowing hours. These patient care and shadowing hours are required but the amount may vary between each PA school. Liannes favorite thing about being a Physician Assistant is that it definitely gives her a good balance of work and her personal life. She works 40 hours every week and is home by a certain time everyday and that she is allowed to do overtime if she wants to as well. Her least favorite thing is having some patients not trust a Physician Assistant verses a Doctor. Some patients arent aware that a PA works under a Physician and if any questions occur then the PA can always go to the Physician for help.
Zachary Stewart 2/21/16 11:21 AM
Comment [6]: Maybe add a few more artifacts. I feel like there is more than just a planner and stethoscope involved in both physician and RN. Kind of makes the job sound boring. Rohdina Harriott 2/21/16 2:00 AM Comment [7]: Well written observations. You should probably add a note on how you divided your times throughout the videos. This will help with knowing the length of the video and why you chose to cover those specific times.
Assignment One Samantha Sealey, 2015, pg. 3
Before doing her prerequisite classes, Lianne had a cumulative GPA of a 3.3. While doing her prerequisites Lianne became very focused and improved her cumulative GPA to a 3.6 along with completing her clinical and shadowing hours. There are multiple ways to get clinical hours, one could become a CAN or an EMT, etc. With Liannes job as an x-ray tech, Chapel Hill counted those working hours as clinical hours.
22:00 minutes: The goals of a Physician Assistant are to help sublimate what Doctors do. PAs get more time with patients, explaining their diagnosis, their different treatment options, and inform patients the importance of taking control of their health care. They also explain what medication theyre taking, what its for, why theyre taking it, when to take it, etc. PAs want patients to know the importance and responsibility of taking control of their healthcare. Liannes PA school definitely prepared her for the job but, so does every other PA school. Just because one college name is more known than others doesnt mean your education will be any different to become a Physician Assistant. Lianne is currently working in urgent care and says it is a good mixture between procedures, acute and primary care. There are tons of different fields one can go into to become a PA, just choose the field that is best for you.
Observation Two: This observation was taken place at West Forsyth Pain Management Center where Amy G. Berry, PA-C was observed of her normal routine day at work. Before the breakdown begins, Amys day is basically set up into two parts, a "morning clinic" and an "afternoon clinic".
Arrival: At the beginning of everyday day, Amy always checks her email for work to see if there were any important emails for patients or the physician. She then prints off a copy of her schedule, which, this is what she does personally. She has the original copy on her computer, but has found it to be better and easier for her to have it in black-and-white versus looking at the computer. She also makes notes on her schedule and checks off everything she has completed so she does not get behind at work. All of the patients records are on an EMR (electronic medical record) which is very helpful and less time consuming for Amy to access her patients documents when they come in for appointments. Before Amy has her first patient she looks at the information that were left on her desk. Since this is a pain management center, the majority of patients have some type of pain medication. For them to receive these prescriptions, Amy must sign off on the Rx's (prescriptions) reports, prior authorizations for medications, or referrals. She also calls back any patient that left messages from the previous day or weekend. While doing this she checks their EMR to make sure the patient is getting the right medication.
The Morning Clinic: After all of this, Amys day finally begins at 8:15am with her first patient. When the patient comes in, the nurse always sees them first. The nurse gathers the patients vital signs, asks a summary of what's going on and why he/she are here today, asks about any major changes since their previous appointment, and does any medication reconciliation. Once Amy goes in with the patient, she first introduces herself
Assignment One Samantha Sealey, 2015, pg. 4
as if it is a new patient, or if it is a returning patient she greets them and ask how they are doing. She then goes over a complete review of the body systems. Troubleshoots any problems that may have been occurring, and goes back over the medications that they are taking and the effectiveness. If there are issues with the medications for their pain management she then decides on what treatment change is needed or consults with the supervising physician. During a patient's visit she tries very hard to either do her documentation completely or make many notes on each patient so at the end of the day she can have information for the legal record. A quote from Amy, There is no way you can see 20 plus patients and want to document at the end of the day. Making mini notes gives her the key words to help her remember each patient if she doesn't complete a complicated patients documentation. This entire process is repeated with each patient.
Lunch break: During the lunch break, Amy does actually get to eat lunch. However, most days she does not leave the office. During her lunch she looks at messages that have come in during the morning, signs off on more Rx refills, finishes her notes from the previous patients, completes morning dictation, and addresses the supervising attending of any other issues that may arise.
The Afternoon Clinic: After Amys lunch break, her afternoon clinic begins. The afternoon clinic begins at 1pm and Amys first patient is seen by 1:15pm. The afternoon clinic is basically a repeat of the morning clinic. She rarely ever leaves any dictation of notes until the next day. Because, depending upon the area of healthcare you work in, this is an essential. Before working with the Pain Management facility, Amy worked with breast cancer patients, and said you never knew when they would have to go to the hospital in the middle of the night. With that, all medication changes or changed treatment plans had to be current incase of emergency situations. All health care of patients come down to what you are responsible for. A physician assistant has the same liability of a doctor. However, a physician assistant are usually not respected as much as a doctor because people/patients tend to think a Physician Assistants are not wise since they arent a Doctor when actually they are very smart.
Observation Three: For this observation, Wendy Wrenn, RN was observed during her normal day of work at the Winston-Salem Gynecology. Wendy graduated from Forsyth Tech Community College in 1997 and has been a Registered Nurse for almost 19 years. One thing similar between a PA and a RN is that both have to work under an actual Physician.
Arrival: Wendy arrives to the office around 8am to begin her day. Once she arrives at work she picks up the copy of the day's schedule and writes mini notes just like Amy does. One difference is that they do not have an EMR/ electronic medical record like Amy does at her work. She then listens to the voicemails or reads emails from the receptionist and jots down important information from those messages and reviews the messages with the physician, if needed. After this, Wendy goes over lab results and other reports with Doctor. Finally, the first patient is at 8:30 am.
Zachary Stewart 2/21/16 11:13 AM
Comment [8]: Your observations are really long. Maybe make them more concise to where the reader wont get bored. I feel like there is too much auxiliary information crowding the needed information.
Assignment One Samantha Sealey, 2015, pg. 5
First patient: Before patient is brought back, Wendy reviews the patient's chart checking the last time a pap smear, bone density, labs, and mammogram were done with the patient and writes down the results so it's easy for the doctor to glance in one place for the results so he/she does not have to search for them. If the patient is here for a routine exam/pap smear and breast exam, Wendy then fills out the lab request for the pap smear to be sent. She then gets the patient back to go in a room where she takes their height, weight, BMI, and blood pressure. Wendy also reviews over their medications and reconcile any changes since the previous appointment. She asks a brief summary of any issues or problems that they are having, if any, and instruct the patient on using the restroom to empty their bladder before their examination with the Doctor. If the patient is here for a problem visit or talk, she gets the patient back and discusses what exactly is going on with them and instruct them accordingly. Wendy then reviews the information obtained with the physician and then help assists the doctor with the patient. Nurses assist the physician with any procedure: from Pap smears, endometrial biopsies, colposcopies, breast exams, STD testing, placement of IUD's, and other various procedures. This is done by protocol and is illegal not to have a Nurse in the room during the examination. After the examination is complete and patient exits the room, Wendy is then responsible for cleaning the room and all of instruments. This repeats itself numerous times throughout the day.
Lunch Break: At Winston-Salem Gynecology, they have a short 30-minute lunch break, but Wendy does not leave the office. In between patients, she sometimes calls other patients back so she does not have so many to call at the end of the day.
End of day: At the days end, Wendy restocks and cleans the rooms. She washes all instruments and put them in the autoclave to sterilize the instruments. She puts all of the specimens out to be picked up by the lab courier the following day. Lastly, she calls all of the patients back from the voicemails or messages than were left from the front desk, calls in refills on prescriptions, calls patients with their report results, and fills out prior authorization for medications and surgery patients. Usually, Wendy is the last one to leave so; she then sets the alarm and locks the door when heading out.
II. Interview For this interview, I interviewed Wendy Wrenn RN from the previous observation. I emailed Wendy these five questions and she emailed me back her responses.
1. Since you have been a Registered Nurse for almost 19 years, have you ever regretted going to nursing school verse any other health occupation? If so or if not, why? I decided to go into nursing when I was young. From the time I was a little girl, I was told how caring and compassionate I was. My aunt is a Registered Nurse and I always looked up to her. She became a nurse after my mother, her sister, was killed in an automobile accident. As my aunt went through nursing school and I watched and listen to her, I then decided I would go to college to become a nurse. In 1989, I applied to the Associate Degree Nursing (ADN) program at Forsyth Technical
Rohdina Harriott 2/20/16 3:31 PM
Comment [9]: Really enjoyed your interview. The responses went in-depth, it gave me insight on a few things as well, the individual you interviewed did a great job with clarity. I also liked how you formatted your questions.
Assignment One Samantha Sealey, 2015, pg. 6
Community College. I was accepted and began the following spring. I completed one year of the program, and thought I couldn't do it. Once again, I stopped school. After a few years of maturing and working, I decided I was going to finish what I started. I basically worked full time between a job at Baptist hospital and a shop in the mall. It was hard, and my last semester I became pregnant. This time, I wasn't giving up. In May 1997, I graduated with honors. A few weeks later, I sat for my nursing boards and passed. A few weeks later I received my license as a Registered Nurse; and a few months after, I became a mother. I have never regretted either, nor have I wanted to be in any other profession. I gain joy from both my professional and personal jobs. If I had stayed in school from the beginning, I may have gone on into the nurse anesthetist program or advanced my degree to teach. Instead, I chose to raise my daughter. I may have some regrets in this life, but nursing and motherhood will not be one them.
2. What have been some things you struggled with to become a nurse and while working as a nurse? The politics that surround nursing and the entire health care field are struggle for us all. When you have people behind a desk telling you what all you have to document and all the questions you have to answer, it can take away from the personal, empathetic experience with the patient. In nursing and other health care professions, there will be things that are heart breaking as well as heart lifting. I have numerous stories of those types of examples. They are the reason I stay in the nursing profession.
3. What is some advice you would give someone that wants to enter the field? Advice. Make sure you are going into the nursing profession because it is something that you have a passion for, and not just to make a good living. Being a good nurse is not just being book smart and collecting a decent paycheck. It is part of your heart. You must have compassion, empathy, and patience. You are dealing with human beings, not papers or machines.
4. In terms of education and schooling, how would you compare becoming a Registered Nurse to becoming a Physician Assistant? The education for becoming a registered nurse versus a physicians assistant, is different in that a physician assistant has an undergraduate degree, four years, of either a BS or a BA degree, then applies to a PA program where they graduate with a masters degree and are eligible to sit for their certification boards as a Physician Assistant (PA-C). In nursing, you can sit for your North Carolina state boards after completing either a two year accredited nursing program, which is known as an Associate Degree Nurse (ADN) or a four year nursing program, known as a Bachelors of Science in Nursing (BSN). Only after graduating school and passing state boards can you work as a registered nurse.
5. As for the upcoming future in the health field, do you have any predictions as to what will happen to RNs and PAs?
Assignment One Samantha Sealey, 2015, pg. 7
The future of health care as a whole is not stable. I have seen many fantastic advances in treatments for patients. However, I have seen more patients treated as a number than those great events. There have already been thousand of medical professionals laid off from the two major health care providers in our area, and there will be more. The majority of nurses and physician assistants are, and will continue to be overworked in the future unless huge changes are made. This is against all ethics, and is unsafe for the patients as well as the health care providers.
III. Analyze
Throughout this assignment I am comparing the differences between a Physician Assistant and a Registered Nurse. This topic is an important interest to me because I am debating whether or not I want to go to Nursing School or PA school. For my first observation, I watched a video on YouTube about a womans journey becoming a Physicians Assistant and she answers questions that were asked to her about a PA. This video was really interesting because she explained thoroughly of what needs to be done for PA school, how she got through her education, and advice for anyone wanting to become a Physician Assistant. To be qualified for PA School one must have a specific amount of clinical hours, shadowing hours, a bachelors degree with the correct prerequisite classes, and a certain GPA. From observing Amy Berry, PA-C for my second observation, I learned a gist of what it is like to work as a Physician Assistant and they are capable of doing. Physician Assistants work under a Physician, they also have their own patients. PAs prescribe medications, sign off on prescriptions, diagnose patients, and completing appointments with patients. The last observation and interview was with Wendy Wrenn, RN. By interviewing and observing her, not only did I learn what a Registered Nurse is capable of doing but I also learned some differences between a PA and a RN. For example, throughout Amys day at work she was writing prescriptions pain medications, completing appointments with patients, and doing documentation. As for Wendy, throughout her day, she is responsible for reviewing charts, lab results, taking the patients weight, temperature, and vitals. Physician Assistants are of a higher occupation than a Registered Nurse therefore, they are permitted to diagnose patients and prescribe medications where RNs cannot. Interests: The differences between a PA and a RN program The differences between becoming a PA and a RN Finding a specific field of interest for a PA and RN
IV. Chart
Search Terms Sources Becoming a Physician Assistant Google Scholar- Ballweg, Ruth, et al. Physician Assistant: a Guide to Clinical Practice: Expert Consult Online and Print. Elsevier Health Sciences, 2013. Becoming a Registered Nurse UNCC Library Database- Becoming a registered nurse: the nurse extern experience, 2006
Zachary Stewart 2/21/16 11:23 AM
Comment [10]: maybe be a little more informative on you interest. What they mean and what they require. They're just a little vague. Rohdina Harriott 2/21/16 11:34 AM Comment [11]: Your interests were good but the search terms should've been written under your points before being put in your table. I got a little lost because I wasn't sure if the interests you wrote were just what you pulled out from your paper or the converted search times. So maybe just add them below.
Assignment One Samantha Sealey, 2015, pg. 8
Physician Assistant Program Google Scholar- Physicians Assistant education in the United States, 2007
Registered Nurse Program Google Scholar- Advance Practice Palliative learning, 2016
V. Propose In todays society of the healthcare field there are many important occupations taking place, for instance a Physician Assistant and a Registered Nurse. A Physician Assistant and a Registered Nurse are two completely different health occupations but they are similar in some ways. The education between the two are very different, to become a PA one must have their bachelors degree, and masters degree while attending PA school. To become a RN one must have their associates degree while attending nursing school. Both of these occupations require clinical and shadowing hours as mentioned in the analysis above. A Physician Assistant and a Registered Nurse are two different occupations thus, this paper will explore more specifically on how each occupations compare with one another at work, their controversies, and financial distributions.