Physician Assistant Studies · Georgia

Physician Assistant Studies colleges in Georgia

Physician Assistant Studies program coverage in Georgia is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

Physician Assistant Studies trains clinicians to diagnose illness, order tests, and prescribe treatment as part of a physician-led care team, a graduate, generalist path into medicine.

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What you'll study in a Physician Assistant Studies program

  • Human anatomy and physiology with cadaver or laboratory work
  • Clinical pharmacology and prescribing principles
  • Physical examination and patient history-taking skills
  • Differential diagnosis and clinical decision-making
  • Pathophysiology of common acute and chronic conditions
  • Interpretation of laboratory results and diagnostic imaging
  • Supervised clinical rotations across medical and surgical specialties
  • Suturing, wound care, and minor procedural techniques
  • Medical ethics, patient safety, and team-based care

Where a Physician Assistant Studies degree can lead

  • Physician Assistant
  • Surgical Physician Assistant
  • Emergency Medicine Physician Assistant
  • Primary Care Physician Assistant
  • Orthopedic Physician Assistant
  • Dermatology Physician Assistant

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 physician assistants median $133,260).

Physician Assistant Studies prepares students to practice clinical medicine as part of a physician-led care team, examining patients, ordering and interpreting tests, forming a diagnosis, and managing a treatment plan. Coursework blends the basic medical sciences, anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, and pathophysiology, with hands-on clinical skills such as taking a history, performing a physical exam, and developing differential diagnoses. Because the training is deliberately generalist, students rotate across areas like family medicine, pediatrics, women's health, surgery, emergency care, and behavioral health, and many programs emphasize care for rural and medically underserved communities. This sets the field apart from nursing, which builds on a nursing-care model, and from medical school, which leads to an independent physician license over a longer residency-based path.

The credential is a graduate one: students typically earn a master's degree after completing a didactic phase of classroom and laboratory study followed by supervised clinical rotations, often called the clinical year, that place them directly in patient-care settings. Programmatic accreditation and a state license to practice are commonly required, and most graduates also sit for a national certifying exam, prospective students should verify the specific requirements for any program and state. After graduating, physician assistants work in hospitals, primary care and specialty clinics, surgical practices, emergency departments, and community health centers, and they may concentrate in fields such as orthopedics, dermatology, emergency medicine, or surgery while practicing in collaboration with physicians on a care team.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of physician assistants, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $133,260 and projects employment to grow about 20.4% from 2024 to 2034; a master's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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