New Role, New Country: introducing US physician assistants to Scotland
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Date
2007-05-04Author
Buchan, James
O'May, Fiona
Ball, Jane
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Buchan, J., O’May, F. and Ball, J. (2007) ‘New role, new country: introducing us physician assistants to scotland’, Human Resources for Health, 5(1), p. 13. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1186/1478-4491-5-13.
Abstract
This paper draws from research commissioned by the Scottish Executive Health Department
(SEHD). It provides a case study in the introduction of a new health care worker role into an
already well established and mature workforce configuration It assesses the role of US style
physician assistants (PAs), as a precursor to planned piloting of the PA role within the National
Health Service (NHS) in Scotland.
The evidence base for the use of PAs is examined, and ways in which an established role in one
health system (the USA) could be introduced to another country, where the role is new and
unfamiliar, are explored.
The history of the development of the PA role in the US also highlights a sometimes somewhat
problematic relationship between P nursing profession. The paper highlights that the concept of
the PA role as a 'dependent practitioner' is not well understood or developed in the NHS, where
autonomous practice within regulated professions is the norm. In the PA model, responsibility is
shared, but accountability rests with the supervising physician. Clarity of role definition, and
engendering mutual respect based on fair treatment and effective management of multi-disciplinary
teams will be pre-requisites for effective deployment of this new role in the NHS in Scotland.