RESUMO
ABSTRACT: The physician assistant/associate (PA) role in Canada is slowly expanding from two provinces and 301 PAs in 2012 to five provinces with 959 PAs and 119 clinical assistants in 2022. This article reviews Canadian PA education, healthcare challenges, and future growth, providing a brief look at where in 2023 the 1,215 members of the Canadian Association of Physician Assistants are found, and some anticipated directions.
Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde , Assistentes Médicos , Humanos , Canadá , Assistentes Médicos/educação , Pessoal de SaúdeRESUMO
Canada's physician assistant (PA) profession remains relatively unknown to the majority of Canadians, and the distribution of the approximately 300 Canadian PAs is uncertain. This report presents March 2012 findings from the 2011 Canadian PA survey, including the number of PAs employed and where they work.
Assuntos
Assistentes Médicos/estatística & dados numéricos , Canadá , Humanos , Assistentes Médicos/provisão & distribuiçãoRESUMO
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the health policies related to physician assistants (PAs) and to understand the factors influencing this medical work force movement. QUALITY OF EVIDENCE: This work combines a review of the literature and qualitative information, and it serves as a historical bookmark. The approach was selected when attempts to obtain reports or literature using customary electronic bibliography (PubMed, CINAHL, Google Scholar, EBSCO, and MEDLINE) searches in English and French, from 1970 through 2010, identified only 14 documents (including gray literature) of relevance. Reports, provincial documents, and information from developers of the PA movement supplemented the literature base. MAIN MESSAGE: The historical development of the role of PAs in Canada spans 2 decades. There are now more than 250 PAs, most working in family medicine and emergency medicine. Enabling legislation for PAs has been formalized in Manitoba, and 3 provinces have recognized PAs in various policy statements or initiatives. Three universities and 1 military training centre have enrolled more than 120 students in PA programs. Retired PAs of the Canadian Forces, returning ex-patriot Canadians who had trained as PAs in PA programs in the United States, and American immigrants are working as PAs in Canada. Demonstration projects are under way to better understand the usefulness of PAs in various medical settings. CONCLUSION: For a public health policy enactment of this size and effect, the literature on PAs in Canada is sparse and limited. In spite of this, PA employment is expanding, family medicine practices are using PAs, and there is enabling legislation planned. The result will likely be increased use of PAs. Documentation about PAs, review of their use, and outcomes research are needed to evaluate this new type of clinician in Canadian society.