USPSTF Clinical Guidelines in a Physician Assistant Curriculum (Text Version) Slide presentation from the AHRQ 2008 conference showcasing Agency research and projects. Slide Presentation from the AHRQ 2008 Annual ConferenceBy Timothy Quigley, M.P.H., PA-COn September 9, 2008, Timothy Quigley, made this presentation at the 2008 Annual Conference. Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (714 KB; Plugin Software Help).Slide 1U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) Clinical Guidelines in a Physician Assistant CurriculumTimothy Quigley, M.P.H., PA-CAssociate ProfessorWichita State UniversitySlide 2Physician Assistants (PAs)History. First class of Navy corpsmen started in 1965.Function. PAs practice medicine under physician supervision.Numbers. 68,000 in clinical practice in 2008.Education. 141 accredited programs.Typical 24-32 months long Masters degree.National Organization: American Academy of Physician Assistants (AAPA).40,000 dues paying members.Legal. All States authorize PA practice including prescribing.Certification after PA education and board exam.Slide 3Board Exam Content: Health Maintenance (10%)Knowledge of:Epidemiology of selected medical conditions.Early detection and prevention of selected medical conditions.Relative value of common screening tests.Appropriate patient education regarding preventable conditions or lifestyle modifications.Prevention of communicable diseases.Immunization schedules and recommendations for infants, children, adults and foreign travelers.Risks and benefits of immunization.Cognitive Skills in:Using counseling and patient education techniques.Communicating effectively with patients to enhance health maintenance.Adapting health maintenance to the patient's context.Using informational databases.Slide 4AAPA Policy.Physician assistants should routinely implement recommended clinical preventive services appropriate to the patient's age, gender, race and individual risk profile..Preventive services offered to patients should be supported by scientific criteria that demonstrate clinical effectiveness..To offer effective clinical preventive services to their patients, it is important that PAs become familiar and stay current with authoritative clinical preventive services guidelines and recommendations.Slide 5USPSTF and AAPALong AAPA clinical partnership with USPSTF. Also Healthy People (HP) 2010, Partnership for Prevention and Task Force on Community Preventive Services.Recently (Summer 2008) AAPA helped distribute 15,000 copies of Guide to Clinical Preventive Services to PAs practicing in: Family Medicine.General Internal Medicine.General Pediatrics.Obstetrics and Gynecology.Slide 6Wichita State University (WSU) PA ProgramHistory. First class started in 1973.Focus on rural primary care.Students. 84 students. 42 in didactic training.42 in clinical training.Graduates. 1,200 graduates. 45% in primary care.30% rural.25% medically underserved.Slide 7WSU PA Graduate Practice Settings, 1975-2006 (%)This graph demonstrates how WSU graduates compare to the national PA population. You will notice that we have a much higher percentage of graduates practicing in the underserved community (25% versus 12%), the primary care community (45% versus 35%), and in the rural practice setting (30% versus 15%).Slide 8USPSTF in the WSU PA CurriculumHistory. USPSTF formally incorporated into curriculum in 1995.Now about 500 students skilled in it's utilization.Texts. Guide to Clinical Preventive Services required.Online. Especially for Rationale, Recommendation Statements and Evidence Review.Homework. Required searches in Guide and Web site.Competency. Working familiarity with Recommendations in Guide.Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs). Required for clinical rotations.Linked to Electronic Preventive Services Selector through USPSTF.Slide 9Why We Value USPSTF GuidelinesIndependence of members.Experts in prevention and primary care.Rigorous evaluations of the literature.Transparency of the scientific evidence.Impartiality of panel and recommendations.Broad spectrum of recommendations for primary care (Screening, Counseling, Chemoprophylaxis).Clarity of Recommendations and Rationale.User-friendly Web site and guide.Slide 10Unanswered QuestionsUse in Clinical Practice. How frequently do PA students and PA grads utilize the Guide or EPS?Use in Patient Education. Resources to discuss/explain recommendations.How do PA clinicians decide on which preventive service to offer (and when)? Current as of February 2009 Internet Citation: USPSTF Clinical Guidelines in a Physician Assistant Curriculum (Text Version). February 2009. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/news/events/conference/2008/Quigley.html