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That is the highest number you will see. She is an American-trained PA and was the first PA hired at Sunnybrook. She also works with the University of Toronto PA Program to set up placements at Sunnybrook. As well, she is the Vice President of the Canadian Association of Physician Assistants.

 

I believe that the minimum salary for a PA in Ontario is 75,000. Most civilian PAs start close to this amount. The highest salary that I know of for a non-military Canadian-trained PA is $109,000 and this person decided to go way up North. If it's not obvious, there is some financial incentive to go up North where help is needed the most.

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That is the highest number you will see. She is an American-trained PA and was the first PA hired at Sunnybrook. She also works with the University of Toronto PA Program to set up placements at Sunnybrook. As well, she is the Vice President of the Canadian Association of Physician Assistants.

 

I believe that the minimum salary for a PA in Ontario is 75,000. Most civilian PAs start close to this amount. The highest salary that I know of for a non-military Canadian-trained PA is $109,000 and this person decided to go way up North. If it's not obvious, there is some financial incentive to go up North where help is needed the most.

 

That is not the highest number you will see. That is appropriate compensation for an emerg PA and, in fact, on the low end for an experienced emerg pa. If Zlata (the PA in question) were still in the USA, she would be making a lot more money than that. She is a wonderful person and a good clinician. In my opinion she is being underpaid. She works the same number of shifts as the staff physicians and, like them, has teaching and research duties. Also, she coordinates much of the learning in the emerg and performs all her duties with grace.

 

As for starting salaries for PAs, most people I know in the first two classes from Mac are making a lot more than 75gs, at least 5 people having started at about $90,000.

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That is not the highest number you will see. That is appropriate compensation for an emerg PA and, in fact, on the low end for an experienced emerg pa. If Zlata (the PA in question) were still in the USA, she would be making a lot more money than that. She is a wonderful person and a good clinician. In my opinion she is being underpaid. She works the same number of shifts as the staff physicians and, like them, has teaching and research duties. Also, she coordinates much of the learning in the emerg and performs all her duties with grace.

 

As for starting salaries for PAs, most people I know in the first two classes from Mac are making a lot more than 75gs, at least 5 people having started at about $90,000.

 

Yes, I am aware that there are PAs in the US making ~150,000. Salary will obviously increase with experience. By "highest salary that you will see" I just mean that I do not know of any other PA's in Canada making more than that amount. I will not speak about military PAs because I have no idea how they are paid. Whether her salary is reasonable for the duties that she performs is another debate.

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Yes, I am aware that there are PAs in the US making ~150,000. Salary will obviously increase with experience. By "highest salary that you will see" I just mean that I do not know of any other PA's in Canada making more than that amount. I will not speak about military PAs because I have no idea how they are paid. Whether her salary is reasonable for the duties that she performs is another debate.

 

I am talking about Canadian PAs. There are many making more than that.

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I am talking about Canadian PAs. There are many making more than that.

 

Okay - we obviously have different sources of information.

 

In one of your previous posts on this forum you posted that "the lowest (salary) is $75,000.00 and the highest I know of for certain right now is $109,000.00. (although I understand there are actually PAs in Ontario making about $150,000.00 already I can't substantiate this)". I believe I said something similar in this thread. If you're able to substantiate the 150K claim now, that's great, but with my limited exposure to date, I cannot.

 

The main point that I am trying to make is that her salary is probably not the norm in terms of Canadian-trained civilian PAs at the present time (granted, many of these people have only been working for < 1.5 years and their salaries will likely continue to increase). If it is, than she really ought to be paid more.

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Okay - we obviously have different sources of information. I'm not trying to argue, the main point that I am trying to make is that her salary is probably not the norm in terms of Canadian-trained civilian PAs at the present time.

 

We don't know for certain what the norm is at this point. We only have individual data points. It will take a good number of years before we have solid data.

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I'm a bit confused. So after you completed the PA program at Mac, do you take more courses to specialize if you want to work in Emergency?

 

No, most PAs go straight into work. There are always short certifications over a few days (like ACLS or ultrasound stuff) that one can do. But, in general, the whole point of PA training is to create a polyvalent generalist clinician who is practice-ready to work under supervision. Essentially, a graduating PA should be at a similar level in terms of skills and knowledge to a new PGY1 and is expected to function in a similar fashion, over time getting more autonomy as they learn on the job and through continuous reading and application of skills.

 

That said, there are PA residencies in the USA, with emergency medicine being a popular 12-18 month post-PA training program. They tend to be similar in rotation schedules to the CCFP 1 year emerg program. Notably at Johns Hopkins

(http://www.hopkinsbayview.org/emresidency) and Cornell

(http://web.me.com/brooks16pa/Cornell_EMPA/Home.html).

 

EM PA residencies are usually about 12 months long and typically include

several months of adult and pediatric emergency medicine as well as

several month to two month long rotations in ICU, anaesthesia,

orthopedics, trauma, cardiology, and sometimes others.

 

A concentrated year of residency aimed at the development of PA

emergency medicine specialists provides for a faster learning curve

with more structure.

 

All of that said, the vast majority of emerg PAs I know went straight into it out of PA school.

 

Hope that helps!

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No, most PAs go straight into work. There are always short certifications over a few days (like ACLS or ultrasound stuff) that one can do. But, in general, the whole point of PA training is to create a polyvalent generalist clinician who is practice-ready to work under supervision. Essentially, a graduating PA should be at a similar level in terms of skills and knowledge to a new PGY1 and is expected to function in a similar fashion, over time getting more autonomy as they learn on the job and through continuous reading and application of skills.

 

That said, there are PA residencies in the USA, with emergency medicine being a popular 12-18 month post-PA training program. They tend to be similar in rotation schedules to the CCFP 1 year emerg program. Notably at Johns Hopkins

(http://www.hopkinsbayview.org/emresidency) and Cornell

(http://web.me.com/brooks16pa/Cornell_EMPA/Home.html).

 

EM PA residencies are usually about 12 months long and typically include

several months of adult and pediatric emergency medicine as well as

several month to two month long rotations in ICU, anaesthesia,

orthopedics, trauma, cardiology, and sometimes others.

 

A concentrated year of residency aimed at the development of PA

emergency medicine specialists provides for a faster learning curve

with more structure.

 

All of that said, the vast majority of emerg PAs I know went straight into it out of PA school.

 

Hope that helps!

 

Let me begin by saying that I don't know nearly as much as I should and would like to about PA's (from what I've heard I think the idea behind them is great!).

 

But... by the time someone is a PGY1 he/she has usually completed a 4 year undergrad (often in a life science), 2 years of preclerkship, 2 years of crazy hours in clerkship, and has passed internationally recognized medical exams. Saying that a newly graduated PA operates with the same knowledge and skill is not only incorrect, it's quite disrespectful.

 

As allied health professionals, we all need to work together within our capacities and we definitely need to respect all colleagues' knowledge, skill, and experience. However, we also need to be careful not to overstep. If everyone had the same skillset, we wouldn't need diverse teams with different perspectives.

 

This isn't meant to start any sort of turf-war... your comment just stood out to me. I wouldn't touch the salary debate with a 29 ft pole :)

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But... by the time someone is a PGY1 he/she has usually completed a 4 year undergrad (often in a life science), 2 years of preclerkship, 2 years of crazy hours in clerkship, and has passed internationally recognized medical exams. Saying that a newly graduated PA operates with the same knowledge and skill is not only incorrect, it's quite disrespectful.

 

Hi JustMe,

 

Thank you for your enthusiastic response. However, I never said what you claim I said and, what is more, your description of MDs deserves some comment. Thus:

 

1) Do not put words in my mouth; I didn't say "same" I said "similar."

 

2) MD students at McMaster complete about 15 months of preclerkship and then 16 months of clerkship. PA students complete about 12 months of preclerkship and then 12 months of clerkship. The PA students take many of the same exams as the MD students.

 

3) PAs also have licensing/certification exams to pass.

 

4)Most PA students have also usually completed previous university work in the life sciences. I have an Honours Bachelor of Health Sciences from McMaster University and most of my classmates also have completed life science based bachelor degrees. In the USA and at Manitoba, the majority of PA Programs are now graduate-level, thus requiring a completed undergraduate degree.

 

5) It is entirely appropriate to state that a graduating PA should be at a similar level with a graduating MD. That is the entire point of PA training, 80 per cent of medical school in in 75% of the time. It works. It has worked in the USA for 50 years and it is working in Canada.

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Interesting, if a graduating PA works at a "similar level" as a graduating MD, then why doesn't everyone just be PA's and have 1-2 supervisor MD's? We should totally be graduating a huge stock of PA's to MD's at some crazy 9:1 ratio then.

 

Why not just skip all the funding that the government is allocating for medical student training? PA training is obviously only 2 years and a lot less.

 

I'm not trying to be a jerk, but trying to be logical here whenever try to argue that NP's or PA's are "very similar" or "almost as good" as MD's. If that is the case, then you should just lobby for the government to decrease med student enrollment and significantly increase PA and NP spots. Because if there is a much cheaper way to train "almost" the same level of competency as you are arguing, why bother through our rigorous training? What is the point?

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There is a reason why the Government of Ontario is funding/pushing PAs so much. For the same reason Manitoba did it and the same reason it works in the USA. Govt officials realized that they can pay a PA less money to do most of the same work as an MD and it costs less to train a PA.

 

Interesting, if a graduating PA works at a "similar level" as a graduating MD, then why doesn't everyone just be PA's and have 1-2 supervisor MD's? We should totally be graduating a huge stock of PA's to MD's at some crazy 9:1 ratio then.

 

Why not just skip all the funding that the government is allocating for medical student training? PA training is obviously only 2 years and a lot less.

 

I'm not trying to be a jerk, but trying to be logical here whenever try to argue that NP's or PA's are "very similar" or "almost as good" as MD's. If that is the case, then you should just lobby for the government to decrease med student enrollment and significantly increase PA and NP spots. Because if there is a much cheaper way to train "almost" the same level of competency as you are arguing, why bother through our rigorous training? What is the point?

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Lol nice and who exactly is calling these shots and and deciding whether the quality of service is "most of the same work"? And what are they exactly basing this upon? Where do you draw the line anyway, if you're going to make a crash course, might as well just keep shortening the training time. We should just cut back on residency training too, I mean, I'm sure surgeons who train for 1 year less will do "most of the same work" as well. Heck, why not make it 2 years less.

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Lol nice and who exactly is calling these shots and and deciding whether the quality of service is "most of the same work"? And what are they exactly basing this upon? Where do you draw the line anyway, if you're going to make a crash course, might as well just keep shortening the training time. We should just cut back on residency training too, I mean, I'm sure surgeons who train for 1 year less will do "most of the same work" as well. Heck, why not make it 2 years less.

 

 

I encourage you to review the literature (in other threads in this forum you can see links to specific studies) on PAs. There is good research evidence to support PAs.

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I just find it interesting how PA's will integrate into a system where their role by definition doesn't allow them to practice independently, but how they will work with that idea when there is the mentality that they are just as capable as a MD. One's training is not only dictated by the number of hours they work, but also the expectations that are made of them and quality of training. From personal experience, med students and PA students I have observed were NOT subjected to the same expectations when on call or during a rotation. Similarly, which medical exams are PA students writing that are the same ones that med students write? Do they write the LMCC's?

 

To be fair, the PA students I have worked have been awesome people and very bright. But honestly, if I was in practice in the future, I would worry about hiring a PA to work for me who thought they were just as good as a MD. Not because of pride issues or whatever, but because I find it a safety concern. For any individual who is not allowed to practice independently, you wonder about safety....whether they will check with you when it is beyond the scope of their knowledge/experience or just brush it off because they think they are fully capable of handling it (when they are in fact not).

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1) There are plenty of PAs who are better clinicians than MDs, plenty of MDs who are better clinicians than PAs, and plenty of bad PAs and plenty of bad MDs.

 

2)At the DeGroote School of medicine the expectations of PA clerks are the same as for MD clerks. Indeed, for me, on certain rotations, even more so as I was expected to function like a pgy1.

 

3)As I already said in other threads on here that I encourage you to read through: at the DeGroote School of Medicine PAs take the PPI and CAEs. It would seem to me that you are unfamiliar with PA training at McMaster.

 

 

You seem to have some interest in arguing and debating things about which you are not very-well informed. I have said many times that I am here to help answer questions about PAs and not to debate people. I have merely stated facts that one can check fairly easily. I'm not going to continue this. I encourage you to read-up on PAs.

 

 

I just find it interesting how PA's will integrate into a system where their role by definition doesn't allow them to practice independently, but how they will work with that idea when there is the mentality that they are just as capable as a MD. One's training is not only dictated by the number of hours they work, but also the expectations that are made of them and quality of training. From personal experience, med students and PA students I have observed were NOT subjected to the same expectations when on call or during a rotation. Similarly, which medical exams are PA students writing that are the same ones that med students write? Do they write the LMCC's?

 

To be fair, the PA students I have worked have been awesome people and very bright. But honestly, if I was in practice in the future, I would worry about hiring a PA to work for me who thought they were just as good as a MD. Not because of pride issues or whatever, but because I find it a safety concern. For any individual who is not allowed to practice independently, you wonder about safety....whether they will check with you when it is beyond the scope of their knowledge/experience or just brush it off because they think they are fully capable of handling it (when they are in fact not).

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