1.no required residency.(optional residencies for pa's at
www.appap.org)
2.ability to change fields at will. a pa can work surgery 1 year and peds the next, etc.or peds and er and surgery at the same time.
3. lower debt load of 2-3 yr degree vs 4
4. malpractice covered by employer
5. faster growth rate of profession. the pa field(# of jobs) is expected to grow 50% in the next decade. this makes it the 3rd fastest growing field overall(see prior thread about growth rate)
6. no office overhead
7.ability to earn md level salary( > 100k) if you go into a specialty field like er, surgery, or ortho with less time spent in school and more of your money to keep because you have fewer loans.
if you have any doubt about being a pa go to an md/do program so you won't ever have to wonder what if?
to the earlier poster who asked about pa's in us md programs: there are lots. I have several friends who went this route. one finished 1st in his class and became chief resident at a prestigious em residency program.many pa's go the d.o. route because they tend to appreciate those with prior experience and don't frown at a 40 yr old medschool applicant like some md programs do.
one of my current md attendings was a former pa. went to georgetown med.not a shabby program.....