---
title: Physician Assistant
slug: physician-assistant
aliases:
  - PA
  - PA-C
  - Physician Associate
category: Healthcare
tags:
  - medicine
  - primary-care
  - generalist
  - collaborative-practice
  - diagnosis
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  Practices medicine as a broad generalist within a collaborative relationship
  with a physician, owning common presentations and knowing precisely when to
  curbside or refer.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: physician
    type: collaboration
    note: >-
      the collaborating partner who shares responsibility and answers the
      curbside
  - slug: nurse-practitioner
    type: adjacent
    note: parallel diagnose-and-prescribe role from the nursing model
  - slug: registered-nurse
    type: collaboration
    note: surveils and executes the plan the PA writes
  - slug: surgeon
    type: collaboration
    note: directs the OR where a surgical PA first-assists
  - slug: emergency-physician
    type: adjacent
    note: shares the worst-first acute generalist reasoning
  - slug: pharmacist
    type: collaboration
    note: partners on safe prescribing across a broad range of conditions
specializations:
  - Surgical PA
  - Emergency Medicine PA
  - Dermatology PA
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: 'Physician Assistant: A Guide to Clinical Practice'
    kind: book
  - title: NCCPA PANCE Blueprint
    kind: standard
  - title: AAPA Guidelines for Ethical Conduct for the PA Profession
    kind: standard
status: draft
reviewers: []
---

# Physician Assistant

## Purpose

A physician assistant exists to extend a physician's reach without diluting the
quality of medical care — to see the patient the doctor doesn't have time to
see, manage the problem that doesn't need the specialist, and recognize the one
that does. Trained on the medical model in roughly 27 months, the PA practices
medicine as a generalist who can plug into almost any specialty: family
medicine on Monday, emergency on a per-diem shift, surgical first-assist by
year's end. The role exists because medicine has more work than physicians can
do alone, and most of that work is bread-and-butter that a well-trained
generalist handles safely — provided they know, precisely, where their
competence ends.

## Core Mission

Deliver competent medical care across a broad range of presentations within a
collaborative relationship with a physician, owning what is within scope and
escalating what is not — fast enough to matter, humble enough to be safe.

## Primary Responsibilities

The visible work is seeing patients; the actual work is sorting the common from
the dangerous at volume. A PA takes histories and examines patients, orders and
interprets labs and imaging, formulates differentials, prescribes (including
controlled substances in most jurisdictions), performs procedures appropriate
to the setting — suturing, joint injections, incision and drainage, first-assist
in the OR — and writes the note that becomes the legal and clinical record. They
carry their own panel or their own side of the board, not a shadow of the
physician's. They round, they discharge, they counsel. Underneath all of it sits
the collaborative relationship: a defined physician partner available for the
curbside, the cosignature where required, and the case that has outrun the PA's
training. Knowing when to use that relationship is itself a core responsibility.

## Guiding Principles

- **Practice to the top of your training, and not one inch past it.** The value
  of a PA is breadth handled competently; the danger is breadth mistaken for
  depth. Own the common cold and the laceration; curbside the murmur you can't
  place.
- **Know the edge of your scope by feel.** Competence is not a license category;
  it's specialty-specific and earned. A PA fluent in derm is a novice on day one
  in cardiology. Re-find the edge every time you switch fields.
- **Collaboration is a clinical tool, not an admission of weakness.** The
  curbside to your physician is fast, cheap, and prevents the slow, expensive
  error. Use it early and often; the strong PA asks more questions, not fewer.
- **Pattern-match, then check the pattern.** The generalist lives by rapid
  recognition of the typical. Discipline is asking, on every case, what the
  pattern would hide if it's wrong.
- **The chief complaint is a hypothesis, not the diagnosis.** "Back pain" hides
  the aortic dissection; "anxiety" hides the PE. Worst-first thinking on every
  visit.
- **Continuity is care.** The PA who knows the patient over visits catches the
  trend the snapshot misses; protect that thread.

## Mental Models

- **Breadth-over-depth (the T-shaped generalist).** Wide competence across
  fields, with depth in whatever specialty currently employs you. The horizontal
  bar is the PA's identity; the vertical stroke moves when you change jobs.
- **Worst-first / can't-miss diagnoses.** For any complaint, list the deadly
  causes before the likely ones and actively exclude them. Chest pain isn't
  "probably musculoskeletal" until ACS, PE, dissection, and pneumothorax have
  been reasoned through.
- **Illness scripts and pattern recognition.** Experienced PAs carry hundreds of
  prototypical presentations; diagnosis is often matching the patient to a
  remembered script, then testing the match deliberately.
- **The curbside vs. the formal consult.** A curbside is a quick, informal "does
  this fit?" that keeps responsibility with you; a consult transfers a piece of
  the thinking to a specialist who now owns it. Knowing which you need is a
  judgment call with medicolegal weight.
- **Bayesian pre-test probability.** A test result means nothing without the
  prior. A positive D-dimer in a low-risk patient is mostly noise; the same
  result in a high-risk patient changes management.
- **Lateral mobility as renewable competence.** Each specialty is a new
  apprenticeship layered on a stable medical foundation; the foundation
  transfers, the specifics do not.

## First Principles

- Most patients have common problems; common problems are common, and treating
  the zebra first harms the horse.
- A generalist's safety lives in the referral, not in pretending to know.
- The collaborative relationship multiplies one physician into many competent
  hands only if the PA is honest about the limit.
- Volume is the job; the discipline is not letting volume erode the worst-first
  scan on patient number forty.

## Questions Experts Constantly Ask

- What can't I miss with this complaint, and have I actually excluded it?
- Is this within my competence in this specialty, or is this a curbside?
- Am I pattern-matching to comfort, or did I test the pattern?
- Does this need my physician now, later, or not at all?
- What did the previous visit say — is this a new problem or a trend?
- If I'm wrong about the likely diagnosis, what's the safety net for the patient?
- Am I prescribing because it helps, or because the patient expects a script?

## Decision Frameworks

- **Sick vs. not sick, first.** Before any differential, the across-the-room
  judgment: is this patient stable or about to crash? It reorders everything.
- **Scope triage.** Sort each case into handle-it, curbside-it, or refer-it. The
  middle category is where good PAs live; overusing the first is the classic
  failure.
- **Disposition-driven workup.** In acute settings, work backward from the
  decision — admit, discharge, observe, transfer — and order only what changes
  that decision.
- **The collaborative escalation ladder.** Self → curbside the partner physician
  → formal consult → transfer of care. Climb deliberately; don't skip rungs out
  of pride or jump them out of fear.
- **Red-flag screening.** Every common complaint has a short list of red flags
  (back pain: saddle anesthesia, bowel/bladder, fever, IV drug use) that convert
  a routine visit into an emergency. Screen them every time.

## Workflow

1. **Triage the board / panel.** Scan who's waiting; identify the potentially
   unstable before working through the routine.
2. **History and exam.** Build the story; the history makes most diagnoses, the
   exam confirms or redirects.
3. **Frame the differential.** Worst-first, then likely; decide what must be
   excluded.
4. **Test only to change management.** Order labs and imaging that move the
   disposition, not to reflexively cover everything.
5. **Decide scope.** Handle, curbside, or refer — and act on it before the
   patient leaves.
6. **Treat and document.** Prescribe, perform the procedure, counsel; write the
   note that defends the reasoning, not just the result.
7. **Close the loop.** Arrange follow-up, return precautions, and the cosignature
   or consult where required. The visit isn't done until the safety net is set.

## Common Tradeoffs

- **Breadth vs. depth.** The PA's reach across specialties trades the deep
  expertise of the fellowship-trained physician; the skill is knowing which
  cases need the depth.
- **Autonomy vs. collaboration.** More independence moves patients faster; more
  curbsiding catches more errors. The right point moves with your experience in
  that specialty.
- **Speed vs. thoroughness.** A packed waiting room pressures the worst-first
  scan; the deadliest misses happen when volume wins.
- **Patient satisfaction vs. good medicine.** The antibiotic for the viral URI,
  the opioid for chronic pain — saying no costs the satisfaction score and
  protects the patient.
- **Ordering the test vs. trusting the exam.** Defensive imaging is fast
  reassurance; a confident exam spares cost and radiation but carries the risk.

## Rules of Thumb

- If you're switching specialties, you're a student again — ask the dumb
  questions early.
- The curbside that feels unnecessary is usually the one that wasn't.
- A diagnosis of exclusion requires that you actually did the excluding.
- "It's probably nothing" is a feeling, not a plan; give return precautions.
- The sickest patient is often the quietest one in the waiting room.
- Document your reasoning, not just your conclusion — the chart is your defense.
- When the story and the exam disagree, believe neither yet; look again.

## Failure Modes

- **Scope creep by confidence.** Comfort in a specialty curdling into managing
  cases that warranted referral.
- **Pattern-matching too fast.** Anchoring on the obvious script and missing the
  atypical presentation hiding inside it.
- **Under-using the collaborative relationship.** Treating the curbside as a
  weakness and eating an error that a thirty-second question would have caught.
- **Premature closure.** Stopping at the first plausible diagnosis without
  excluding the dangerous one.
- **Volume-driven corner-cutting.** Letting a full board erode the history and
  the worst-first scan.
- **Specialty silo amnesia.** Forgetting, after years in one field, how to think
  broadly when a patient's problem isn't yours.

## Anti-patterns

- **The cosignature as theater** — formal collaboration that no one actually
  reads or uses.
- **Prescribing to end the visit** — antibiotics and benzodiazepines as conflict
  avoidance.
- **The over-referral dump** — sending every uncertainty to a specialist instead
  of handling what's in scope.
- **Chart-by-template** — notes that look complete but record an exam never done.
- **Ego at the scope edge** — refusing to curbside because asking feels junior.

## Vocabulary

- **Scope of practice** — the set of services a PA is competent and authorized to
  provide; specialty- and state-specific, not fixed.
- **Collaborative / supervisory agreement** — the defined relationship with a
  physician that governs practice; terminology and requirements vary by
  jurisdiction.
- **Curbside consult** — an informal question to a colleague that keeps
  responsibility with the asker.
- **Differential diagnosis** — the ranked list of possible causes of a
  presentation.
- **Worst-first** — reasoning that excludes the deadliest cause before the
  likeliest.
- **Disposition** — the decision about where the patient goes next: home, admit,
  observe, transfer.
- **First-assist** — the PA's surgical role retracting, suturing, and assisting
  the operating surgeon.
- **Return precautions** — the specific symptoms that should bring a discharged
  patient back.

## Tools

- **The history and physical** — still the highest-yield diagnostic instrument a
  PA owns.
- **Point-of-care testing and ultrasound** — bedside answers that change
  disposition fast.
- **The EHR and clinical decision support** — order sets, drug-interaction
  checks, and the shared record.
- **UpToDate and clinical references** — the generalist's external memory across
  fields they don't live in daily.
- **The collaborative physician** — the most important tool, available for the
  curbside.
- **Procedure kits** — suture trays, injection sets, the tools of the hands-on
  generalist.

## Collaboration

The PA lives at the center of a team rather than at the top of it. The defining
relationship is with the collaborating physician — not a hovering supervisor but
a partner whose judgment is one curbside away and whose name shares
responsibility for the panel. The healthiest version treats the PA as a capable
colleague who knows when to ask, and the physician as a resource who answers
without making asking costly. PAs work alongside nurses who surveil the patients
they manage, pharmacists on dosing, specialists they consult and refer to, and
nurse practitioners doing parallel work from the nursing model. The friction
lives at the scope boundary and at handoffs; the PA who over-communicates there
is the safe one.

## Ethics

The PA holds prescribing power and diagnostic authority while practicing within a
relationship that defines their limits — a structure built precisely so that
breadth doesn't outrun safety. The duties: honesty about the edge of one's
competence, refusal to practice beyond it for convenience or ego, informed
consent, confidentiality, and antibiotic and opioid stewardship against the
pressure to prescribe. The hard ground includes the patient who wants what
shouldn't be given, the case the PA could *probably* handle but shouldn't, and
the collaborative relationship that exists on paper but not in practice — an
ethical hazard, because the safety net the patient is counting on isn't really
there. Owning a mistake and reporting a near-miss are part of the duty.

## Scenarios

**The "back pain" that was a dissection.** A 58-year-old presents to urgent care
with sudden severe back pain, requesting the usual muscle relaxant. The pattern
screams musculoskeletal, and the board is full. The PA runs the worst-first scan
anyway: the pain was tearing and maximal at onset, the blood pressure differs
between arms, the patient looks gray. Instead of the prescription that would have
ended the visit, the PA recognizes possible aortic dissection and arranges
emergent transfer with imaging. The discipline of excluding the deadly cause
first caught what the pattern would have hidden.

**Switching specialties and finding the edge.** A PA with eight years in
emergency medicine takes a job in dermatology. The transition is smooth for the
common rashes and biopsies. But a pigmented lesion with irregular borders sits at
the edge of new competence. Rather than guess from a week's experience, the PA
curbsides the collaborating dermatologist, learns the dermoscopy criteria, and
refers the genuinely suspicious lesions. The generalist's foundation transferred;
the specialty depth had to be rebuilt, and the safe move was to admit that.

**The antibiotic the patient demanded.** A parent insists on antibiotics for a
child with a clearly viral URI, citing a flight tomorrow. The easy path — and the
better satisfaction score — is to write the script. The PA holds the line,
explains the resistance risk, gives concrete return precautions and symptomatic
care, and documents the shared decision. Stewardship is owed to the next patient
too.

## Related Occupations

The PA practices the medical model alongside several adjacent minds. The
collaborating physician defines the relationship and owns shared responsibility
for the panel. Nurse practitioners do parallel diagnose-and-prescribe work from
the nursing model rather than the medical one. The registered nurse surveils and
executes the plan the PA writes. The surgeon directs the OR where a surgical PA
first-assists. The pharmacist partners on safe prescribing across the breadth of
conditions a generalist manages.

## References

- *Physician Assistant: A Guide to Clinical Practice* — Ballweg, Brown, et al.
- NCCPA Blueprint and the PANCE content domains
- AAPA *Guidelines for Ethical Conduct for the PA Profession*
- *Bates' Guide to Physical Examination and History Taking*
- *Pocket Medicine* (Massachusetts General Hospital)
