退伍军人入读美国副医师/助理医师课程。

Q2 Health Professions Journal of Physician Assistant Education Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-16 DOI:10.1097/JPA.0000000000000568
Adam Broughton, Alexis Landry, Mary Showstark, Carey L Barry, Shahpar Najmabadi, Joanne Rolls, Trenton Honda
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:本研究旨在通过考察退伍军人相对于非退伍军人的入学可能性,确定退伍军人是否有不同的机会接受医生助理/助理(PA)教育。我们探讨了退伍军人身份与预科入学率之间的关联,以及随着时间的推移,退伍军人身份与预科入学率之间的变化,以及现役与非现役申请者之间的影响是否有所不同:我们使用多变量逻辑回归法来研究在五个助理医师集中申请服务录取周期(2012-2013、2014-2015、2016-2017、2018-2019、2020-2021)中自我认定的军人身份与助理医师课程入学可能性之间的关联。模型控制了年龄、性别、种族/民族、病人护理经验时间、本科总平均学分绩点和提交的申请数量,并应用 Bonferroni 修正了阿尔法膨胀:在整个研究期间,退伍军人申请人数较少,但从 2012 年(n = 708)到 2020 年(n = 978)有所增长,在回溯期内增长了 38%。尽管有所增长,但预科生中退伍军人的比例却从 2012 年的 4.2% 降至 2020 年的 3.0%。在未经调整的模型中,军人身份与入学几率的关系不大。在调整后的模型中,退伍军人和现役军人身份都与较高的预科入学几率有关,尽管在 0.005 的水平上,现役军人身份与预科入学几率的增加在统计学上并不显著:结论:与非退伍军人相比,退伍军人和现役军人进入美国政治助理专业学习的几率更高。随着时间的推移,退伍军人在预科生中的比例有所下降。这表明,虽然 PA 课程似乎很看重以前的从军经历,但还需要进一步努力评估和解决退伍军人在申请入学时遇到的障碍。
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Military Veteran Matriculation in US Physician Associate/Assistant Programs.

Introduction: This study aims to determine whether veterans have differential access to physician associate/assistant (PA) education by examining likelihood of matriculation relative to nonveteran peers. We explore associations between veteran status and likelihood of matriculation for change over time and whether effects differ among active duty versus non-active-duty applicants.

Methods: Multivariate logistic regression was used to investigate associations between self-identified military status and likelihood of PA program matriculation in five Centralized Applicant Services for Physician Assistants admissions cycles (2012-2013, 2014-2015, 2016-2017, 2018-2019, 2020-2021). Models controlled for age, sex, race/ethnicity, patient care experience hours, total undergraduate grade point average, and number of applications submitted and applied a Bonferroni correction for alpha inflation.

Results: Veteran applicant numbers were small across the study time frame but increased from 2012 (n = 708) to 2020 (n = 978), representing a 38% increase over the lookback period. Despite growth, the proportion of veterans in the matriculant pool has decreased from 4.2% in 2012 to 3.0% in 2020. In unadjusted models, military status was not strongly associated with odds of matriculation. In adjusted models, both veteran and active-duty status were associated with higher odds of matriculation, although this increase was not statistically significant at the 0.005 level for applicants on active-duty.

Discussion: Military veterans and active-duty military personnel have higher likelihood of matriculation into US PA programs relative to nonveteran peers. The proportion of veterans in the matriculant pool has decreased over time. This suggests that while PA programs seems to value previous military experience, further efforts to evaluate and address barriers to military veterans in applying for admissions is needed.

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