The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification

Abstract Background To determine physician assistant/associate (PA) perceptions of the value of certification and explore how they vary across demographic and practice characteristics. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional online survey between March and April 2020 with PAs participating in the lon...

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Main Authors: Andrzej Kozikowski, Dawn Morton-Rias, Kasey Puckett, Colette Jeffery, Sheila Mauldin, Joshua Goodman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2023-04-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04215-2
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author Andrzej Kozikowski
Dawn Morton-Rias
Kasey Puckett
Colette Jeffery
Sheila Mauldin
Joshua Goodman
author_facet Andrzej Kozikowski
Dawn Morton-Rias
Kasey Puckett
Colette Jeffery
Sheila Mauldin
Joshua Goodman
author_sort Andrzej Kozikowski
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background To determine physician assistant/associate (PA) perceptions of the value of certification and explore how they vary across demographic and practice characteristics. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional online survey between March and April 2020 with PAs participating in the longitudinal pilot program for recertification administered by the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA). The survey was distributed to 18,147 PAs, of which 10,965 participated (60.4% response rate). In addition to descriptive statistics, chi-square tests were conducted on demographics and specialty to examine if perceptions of value of certification (1 global and 10 items measuring specific domains) were associated with a particular PA profile. A series of fully adjusted multivariate logistic regressions were performed, exploring the relationship between PA characteristics and the value of certification items. Results Most PAs strongly agreed/agreed that certification helps with fulfilling licensure requirements (9,578/10,893; 87.9%), helps with updating medical knowledge (9,372/10,897; 86.0%), and provides objective evidence of continued competence (8,875/10,902; 81.4%). The items receiving the lowest percentage of responses for strongly agreeing/agreeing were for certification providing no value (1,925/10,887; 17.7%), helping with professional liability insurance (5,076/10,889; 46.6%), and competing with other providers for clinical positions (5,661/10,905; 51.9%). Age 55 and older and practicing in dermatology and psychiatry were among the strongest predictors of less favorable views. PAs from underrepresented in medicine (URiM) backgrounds had more positive perceptions. Conclusions Overall, the findings indicate that PAs value certification; however, perceptions varied by demographics and specialties. PAs who were younger, from URiM backgrounds, and practicing in primary care specialties had among the most favorable perspectives. Continued feedback monitoring is critical in ensuring certification is relevant and meaningful in supporting PAs across demographics and specialties. Measuring PA perceptions of the value of certification is essential to understanding how to support the PA profession's current and future credentialing needs and those who license and hire PAs.
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spelling doaj.art-2eb66e4c474b4d13bc223cb4875c7fe52023-04-16T11:17:16ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202023-04-0123111310.1186/s12909-023-04215-2The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certificationAndrzej Kozikowski0Dawn Morton-Rias1Kasey Puckett2Colette Jeffery3Sheila Mauldin4Joshua Goodman5National Commission on Certification of Physician AssistantsNational Commission on Certification of Physician AssistantsNational Commission on Certification of Physician AssistantsNational Commission on Certification of Physician AssistantsNational Commission on Certification of Physician AssistantsNational Commission on Certification of Physician AssistantsAbstract Background To determine physician assistant/associate (PA) perceptions of the value of certification and explore how they vary across demographic and practice characteristics. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional online survey between March and April 2020 with PAs participating in the longitudinal pilot program for recertification administered by the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA). The survey was distributed to 18,147 PAs, of which 10,965 participated (60.4% response rate). In addition to descriptive statistics, chi-square tests were conducted on demographics and specialty to examine if perceptions of value of certification (1 global and 10 items measuring specific domains) were associated with a particular PA profile. A series of fully adjusted multivariate logistic regressions were performed, exploring the relationship between PA characteristics and the value of certification items. Results Most PAs strongly agreed/agreed that certification helps with fulfilling licensure requirements (9,578/10,893; 87.9%), helps with updating medical knowledge (9,372/10,897; 86.0%), and provides objective evidence of continued competence (8,875/10,902; 81.4%). The items receiving the lowest percentage of responses for strongly agreeing/agreeing were for certification providing no value (1,925/10,887; 17.7%), helping with professional liability insurance (5,076/10,889; 46.6%), and competing with other providers for clinical positions (5,661/10,905; 51.9%). Age 55 and older and practicing in dermatology and psychiatry were among the strongest predictors of less favorable views. PAs from underrepresented in medicine (URiM) backgrounds had more positive perceptions. Conclusions Overall, the findings indicate that PAs value certification; however, perceptions varied by demographics and specialties. PAs who were younger, from URiM backgrounds, and practicing in primary care specialties had among the most favorable perspectives. Continued feedback monitoring is critical in ensuring certification is relevant and meaningful in supporting PAs across demographics and specialties. Measuring PA perceptions of the value of certification is essential to understanding how to support the PA profession's current and future credentialing needs and those who license and hire PAs.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04215-2Physician assistantsPhysician associatePARecertificationValue of certificationPerceptions of certification
spellingShingle Andrzej Kozikowski
Dawn Morton-Rias
Kasey Puckett
Colette Jeffery
Sheila Mauldin
Joshua Goodman
The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
BMC Medical Education
Physician assistants
Physician associate
PA
Recertification
Value of certification
Perceptions of certification
title The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
title_full The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
title_fullStr The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
title_full_unstemmed The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
title_short The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
title_sort association of physician assistant associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
topic Physician assistants
Physician associate
PA
Recertification
Value of certification
Perceptions of certification
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12909-023-04215-2
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