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AAEM now has a JOINT statement on PA residency


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The way I read it was that they are more opposed to the name 'residency' or 'fellowship' being used for non-physicians than the actual training - maybe I'm wrong. And don't SEMPA and ACEP work closely together?

 

EDIT: Yep, I read it wrong. Sounds like they are okay with it, as long as they are in charge of it. Hmmm.

Edited by TheFatMan
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2 hours ago, TheFatMan said:

The way I read it was that they are more opposed to the name 'residency' or 'fellowship' being used for non-physicians than the actual training - maybe I'm wrong. And don't SEMPA and ACEP work closely together?

 

EDIT: Yep, I read it wrong. Sounds like they are okay with it, as long as they are in charge of it. Hmmm.

If you go back and look at AAEM statements, they believe that EVERY emergency patient should be presented to a BC-EM physician. No APPs seeing patient alone, no FM working in EDs, no moonlighting residents. They have gone so far as to say that certain ACEP presidents, who have been in EM for decades, isn’t true EM physician and therefore shouldn’t even be in ACEP. They repeatedly say there are enough EM physicians today, but only 30% of ED visits are attended by a EM physicians. Never do they offer any solutions to meet this gap. Yet also they are against opening any new residencies and want several closed. When solutions are proposed (expanded training and membership to non-EM BC/BE physicians, increase training and scope of APPs, etc) they scream that people will die. 

they exist for one reason, and one reason only, to protect the financial interests of EM physicians. 
 

ACEP has always been more pragmatic in their approach, but it seems AAEM is dragging everyone in on this.
 

https://www.aaem.org/resources/statements/position/aaem-takes-a-stand-against-moonlighting-residents

https://www.aaem.org/current-news/aaem-takes-a-stand-on-the-use-of-apps-in-ed

https://www.aaem.org/resources/statements/position/em-training-programs-for--pas-and-nps

https://www.aaem.org/resources/publications/common-sense/issues/from-the-editors-desk/what-is-acep-thinking

https://epmonthly.com/article/expanding-legitimacy-for-non-certified-docs-a-step-in-the-wrong-direction/

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This is nothing but a political statement. It provide nothing valuable to the real life on ground ED providers. However, I do hope SEMPA and AAPA respond to it, just to make a point that we are trained and qualify to provide patient care within our scope. 

As of now, they are not getting rid of us in the ED or any other settings. Physicians who work in the in trenches love to work with us. It is either working with us or see all the pt by themselves. What we need to do is really advertise our value. We shouldn't be afraid to come up with our "own system".  They don't want us to call "residency" or "fellowship" I think they are being too sensitive and insecure ( I am talking about the organizations). Either way, call it a different name, but postgraduate training for PA/NP is here to stay.

The physician in the trenches do not give a **** what we call our postgraduate training lol. 

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It’s crap like this that just makes me want to push back harder. Every time they try to take something or disparage us, I’m just thinking, okay, I’ll give you a war.

could’ve just supported us and worked alongside us, treated us with respect, like colleagues, helped us compete with NPs (a problem we share), but noooo....has to do it the hard way for everyone.

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14 minutes ago, LT_Oneal_PAC said:

It’s crap like this that just makes me want to push back harder. Every time they try to take something or disparage us, I’m just thinking, okay, I’ll give you a war.

could’ve just supported us and worked alongside us, treated us with respect, like colleagues, helped us compete with NPs (a problem we share), but noooo....has to do it the hard way for everyone.

As I've said before our profession has a history of passivity when challenged. "We" need to become known as The Honey Badger of healthcare when attacked or threatened, the Gadsden Flag says it all.

Edited by CAdamsPAC
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If they arbitrarily restrict the terms “residency” or “fellowship” without going through the appropriate state legislative channels, it is meaningless and unenforceable.  Those terms, unlike “doctor”, are not Officially  protected in any state.     Their statement is anti-competitive and could be reviewed by the FTC; this has actually happened with other initiatives issued by professional organizations who have been warned against restraint of trade issues.    

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Hi guys,

I just read this joint statement (find link below) regarding post-graduate training of PAs, but I found it confusing since I am not yet a PA myself. I figured I would post it here as I'm curious to hear your opinions on the matter.

I found the statement to be too condensed for an outsider to understand its scope and purpose.

https://www.aaem.org/UserFiles/file/AllEMorgjointstatementrepostgradtrainingofNPandPAs.pdf

Thank you guys!

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' The terms “resident,” “residency,” “fellow,” and “fellowship” in a medical setting must be limited to postgraduate clinical training of medical school physician graduates within GME training programs.'
 

The above is from the joint statement. Does this apply to other such non-physician residents and fellows (dentists, optometrists, pharmacists, etc.) who are pursuing clinical post-graduate training? Or just the ones that they're afraid might take the jobs they're "entitled" to?

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1 hour ago, vb315 said:

' The terms “resident,” “residency,” “fellow,” and “fellowship” in a medical setting must be limited to postgraduate clinical training of medical school physician graduates within GME training programs.'
 

The above is from the joint statement. Does this apply to other such non-physician residents and fellows (dentists, optometrists, pharmacists, etc.) who are pursuing clinical post-graduate training? Or just the ones that they're afraid might take the jobs they're "entitled" to?

The latter.

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Saw this on Twitter yesterday...still shaking my head and I'm Canadian, but also a member of SEMPA and therefore kinda sorta a member of ACEP by virtue.  Makes me reconsider whether I should keep paying them money and go back to CAEP (SEMPA is cheaper).  

On a similar note, got to deal with a national medical magazine here picking up an article written by a "health law" specialist lawyer that stinks of rhetoric from the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario and slags down PA's.  

All the phuquewits are coming out of the woodwork this week it seems.

 

SK

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15 hours ago, sk732 said:

Saw this on Twitter yesterday...still shaking my head and I'm Canadian, but also a member of SEMPA and therefore kinda sorta a member of ACEP by virtue.  Makes me reconsider whether I should keep paying them money and go back to CAEP (SEMPA is cheaper).  

On a similar note, got to deal with a national medical magazine here picking up an article written by a "health law" specialist lawyer that stinks of rhetoric from the Registered Nurses Association of Ontario and slags down PA's.  

All the phuquewits are coming out of the woodwork this week it seems.

 

SK

Care to share the article?  I'm kind of curious about how the PA profession is faring in other countries.

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https://www.canadianhealthcarenetwork.ca/physicians/discussions/doctors-should-not-be-treating-pas-as-substitutes-60022?utm_source=EmailMarketing&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Physician_Newsletter&oly_enc_id=4125D3764701J7Y

or:  https://www.ttlhealthlaw.com/health-law-blog/details/health-law-blog/2020/08/26/doctors-should-not-be-treating-physician-assistants-as-substitutes

Thing is, Ontario has ZERO regulation for PA's - they work under delegation and medical directives.  I'm regulated in Manitoba by the Regulated Health Professions Act and The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Manitoba.  However, the article is poorly researched, has scope of practice all out to lunch and really does smell of deliberate disinformation.

SK

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SEMPA is an affiliate organization of ACEP.   Unfortunately that doesn't mean that that ACEP advocates for PA's in EM.  I hope SEMPA issues a very strong response very quickly.

To clarify, SEMPA is an independent organization and is in no way an affiliate organization of ACEP. Once professional societies reach a big enough size, many of them contract with a professional management company to run things like daily operations, conference planning, etc. SEMPA is one of several medical organizations that contract with ACEP’s management services to provide these services. The two organizations have traditionally had a good working relationship, but they are two completely independent entities.


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