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Single Edit One-on-one Service Supplemental Essays
Your success is our passion. (See just some of our 100's of testimonials and comments below). We are ready to help. Our current PA school essay editing service status (28th April 2024): Accepting New Submissions
(Photo: Me circa 1987, just thinking about my future PA School Essay)
- Are you struggling to write your physician assistant personal statement?
- Are you out of ideas, or just need a second opinion?
- Do you want an essay that expresses who you truly are and grabs the reader's attention in the required 5,000-character limit?
We are here to help perfect your PA school essay
I have written countless times on this blog about the importance of your personal statement in the PA school application process. Beyond the well-established metrics (GPA, HCE/PCE hours, requisite coursework, etc.), the personal statement is the most crucial aspect of your application.
This is your time to express yourself, show your creativity, skills, and background, and make a memorable impression in seconds. This will be your only chance, so you must get it right the first time.
For some time, I had been dreaming about starting a physician assistant personal statement collaborative.
A place where PA school applicants like yourself can post their PA school essays and receive honest, constructive feedback followed by an acceptance letter to the PA school of your choice!
I have been reviewing a ton of essays recently, so many in fact that I can no longer do this on my own.
To solve this problem, I have assembled a team of professional writers, editors, and PA school admissions specialists who worked to revise and perfect my PA school application essay.
Beth Eakman has taught college writing and worked as a professional writer and editor since the late 1990s. Her projects have involved a wide range of disciplines and media, from editing technical reports to scriptwriting for the PBS Kids show Super Why! Her writing has appeared in publications including Brain, Child Magazine, New York Family Magazine, and Austin Family Magazine. Beth lives with her family just outside Austin, Texas. She is driven to help each client tell the best version of their story and achieve their dream of becoming a physician assistant.
Deanna Matzen is an author with articles featured in Earth Letter, Health Beats, Northwest Science & Technology, and the Transactions of the American Fisheries Society. With an early career in environmental science, she developed a solid foundation in technical writing. Her communication skills were further honed by producing and editing content for a non-profit website, blog, and quarterly journal. Inspired to extend her craft, she obtained a certificate in literary fiction, which she draws on to build vibrant scenes that bring stories to life. Deanna loves working with pre-PAs who are on the cusp of new beginnings to find their unique story and tell it confidently.
Carly Hallman is a professional writer and editor with a B.A. in English Writing and Rhetoric (summa cum laude) from St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas. She has worked as a curriculum developer, English teacher, and study abroad coordinator in Beijing, China, where she moved in 2011. In college, she was a Gilman Scholar and worked as a staff editor for her university's academic journal. Her first novel, Year of the Goose, was published in 2015, and her first memoir is forthcoming from Little A Books. Her essays and creative writing have appeared in The L.A. Review of Books, The Guardian, LitHub, and Identity Theory, among other publications.
Read more client testimonials or purchase a revision
We Work as a Team
Our team of professional editors is wonderful at cutting out the "fluff" that makes an essay lose focus and sets people over the 5,000-character limit. Their advice is always spot-on.
Sue, Sarah, and Carly are amazingly creative writers who will take your "ordinary" and turn it into entirely extraordinary.
I mean it when I say this service is one-of-a-kind! We have spent countless hours interviewing PA School admissions directors and faculty from across the country to find out exactly what it is they are looking for in your personal statement.
We even wrote a book about it.
To collaborate, we use Google Drive. Google Drive is free, has an intuitive interface with integrated live comments in the sidebar, the ability to have a real-time chat, to collaborate effortlessly, and to compare, revise, or restore revisions on the fly. Google Drive also has an excellent mobile app that will allow you to make edits on the go!
Our team has worked with hundreds of PA school applicants within the Google Drive environment, and we have had enormous success.
The Physician Assistant Essay and Personal Statement Collaborative
I have set up two options that I hope will offer everyone a chance to participate:
- One-of-a-kind, confidential, paid personal statement review service
- A collaborative, free one (in the comments section)
Private, One-On-One Personal Statement Review Service
If you are interested in the paid service, you may choose your plan below.
The Personal Statement Review Service is:
- Behind closed doors within a private, secure network using Google Drive.
- It is completely interactive, meaning we will be able to provide real-time comments and corrections using the Google Drive interface.
- Telephone consultations are included with all edits above the single edit level. It’s often hard to communicate exactly what you want hundreds of miles away; for this reason, we offer the option to edit right along with us over the telephone while sharing in real-time over Google Drive. This is an option available to all our paid clients who purchase above the single edit level.
- We provide both revision and editing of all essays. What’s the difference? See below
- We will provide feedback, advice, and help with brainstorming and topic creation if you would like.
- We will help with a “final touch-up” before the big day, just in case your essay needs a few minor changes.
Why Choose Our Service?
- It’s not our opinion that matters. We have gone the extra step and personally interviewed PA school administrators from across the US to find out exactly what they think makes a personal statement exceptional.
- We are a team of PAs and professional writers, having worked over ten years with PA school applicants like yourself, providing countless hours of one-on-one editing and revision.
- Our clients receive interviews, and many go on to receive acceptance into their PA School of choice.
Because we always give 100%, we will open the essay collaborative for a limited number of applicants each month and then close this depending on the amount of editing that needs to be done and the time that is available.
Our goal is not quantity but quality. We want only serious applicants who are serious about getting into PA school.
Writing is not a tool like a piece of software but more like how a photograph can capture your mood. It’s more like art. The process of developing a unique, memorable personal statement is time-intensive, and it takes hours to compose, edit, finalize, and personalize an essay.
As Antoinette Bosco once said:
And this is why I am charging for this service. We love helping people find stories that define their lives, and we love helping individuals who have the passion to achieve their dreams. It’s hard to describe the feeling I get when an applicant writes back to tell me they were accepted into PA school.
There is no price tag I can place on this; it’s the feeling we get when we help another human being. It’s just like providing health care. But this takes time.
Interested? Choose your plan below.
Read more client testimonials.
Free Personal Statement Review
Post your essay in the comments section for a free critique
We want to make this opportunity available to everyone who would like help with their essay, and that is why we are offering free, limited feedback on the blog.
You post your essay in the comments section, and you will get our critique. It is that easy. We will try to give feedback to every single person who posts their COMPLETE essay here on this blog post in the comments section.
Also, by posting your comment, we reserve the right to use your essay.
We will provide feedback on essays that are complete and fit the CASPA requirements (View CASPA requirements here). We will not provide feedback on partial essays or review opening or closing statements. Your essay will be on a public platform, which has both its benefits and some obvious drawbacks. The feedback is limited, but we will try to help in any way we can.
Note: Comment Rules: Remember what Fonzie was like? Cool. That’s how we’re gonna be — cool. Critical is fine, but if you’re rude, I will delete your stuff. Otherwise, have fun, and thanks for adding to the conversation! And this should go without saying: if you feel the need to plagiarize someone else’s content, you do not deserve to go to PA school.
* Also, depending on the time of year, it may take me several weeks to reply!
We love working with PA school applicants, but don't just take our word for it!
How to submit your essay for the paid service
If you are serious and would like to have real, focused, and personalized help writing your personal statement, please choose your level of service and submit your payment below.
After you have submitted your payment, you will be redirected to the submissions page, where you can send us your essay as well as any special instructions. We will contact you immediately upon receipt of your payment and essay so we may begin work right away.
Pricing is as follows:
Choose your plan, then click "Buy Now" to submit your essay, and we will get started right away!
Every purchase includes a FREE digital copy of our new 100-page eBook, How to Write Your Physician Assistant Personal Statement, Our 101 PA School Admission Essays e-book, the expert panel audiobook, and companion workbook. This is a $65 value included for free with your purchase.
All credit card payments are processed via PayPal over a secure HTTPS server. Once your payment is processed, you will be immediately redirected back to the essay submission page. There, you will submit your essay along with some biographical info and all suggestions or comments you choose to provide. You will receive immediate confirmation that your essay has been securely transmitted as well as your personal copy of "How to Write Your Physician Assistant Personal Statement." Contact [email protected] if you have any questions, comments, or problems - I am available 24/7.
The hourly service includes your original edit and one-on-one time over Google Drive. It is simple to add more time if necessary, but you may be surprised at what a difference just a single edit can make. We find our four-hour service to be the most effective in terms of time for follow-up and full collaboration. We are open to reduced-rate add-ons to suit your individual needs.
Writing and Revision
All writing benefits from rewriting when done well.
When you are in the process of writing a draft of an essay, you should be thinking first about revision, not editing.
What’s the difference?
Revision refers to the substantial changing of text. For example, it may include re-organizing ideas and paragraphs, providing additional examples or information, and rewriting a conclusion for clarity.
Editing, on the other hand, refers to correcting mistakes in spelling, grammar, and punctuation.
On all submissions, we perform both revision and editing.
How to submit your PA school essay for the FREE editing service
Follow the rules above and get to work below in the comments section. I look forward to reading all your essay submissions.
- Stephen Pasquini PA-C
View all posts in this series
- How to Write the Perfect Physician Assistant School Application Essay
- The Physician Assistant Essay and Personal Statement Collaborative
- Do You Recognize These 7 Common Mistakes in Your Personal Statement?
- 7 Essays in 7 Days: PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 1, “A PA Changed My Life”
- PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 2, “I Want to Move Towards the Forefront of Patient Care”
- PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 3, “She Smiled, Said “Gracias!” and Gave me a Big Hug”
- PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 4, “I Have Gained so Much Experience by Working With Patients”
- PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 5, “Then Reach, my Son, and Lift Your People up With You”
- PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 6, “That First Day in Surgery was the First Day of the Rest of my Life”
- PA Personal Statement Workshop: Essay 7, “I Want to Take People From Dying to Living, I Want to Get Them Down From the Cliff.”
- Physician Assistant Personal Statement Workshop: “To say I was an accident-prone child is an understatement”
- 9 Simple Steps to Avoid Silly Spelling and Grammar Goofs in Your PA School Personel Statement
- 5 Tips to Get you Started on Your Personal Essay (and why you should do it now)
- How to Write Your Physician Assistant Personal Statement The Book!
- How to Write “Physician Assistant” The Definitive PA Grammar Guide
- 101 PA School Admissions Essays: The Book!
- 5 Things I’ve Learned Going Into My Fourth Physician Assistant Application Cycle
- 7 Tips for Addressing Shortcomings in Your PA School Personal Statement
- The #1 Mistake PRE-PAs Make on Their Personal Statement
- The Ultimate PA School Personal Statement Starter Kit
- The Ultimate Guide to CASPA Character and Space Limits
- 10 Questions Every PA School Personal Statement Must Answer
- 5 PA School Essays That Got These Pre-PAs Accepted Into PA School
- 7 Questions to Ask Yourself While Writing Your PA School Personal Statement
- 101 PA School Applicants Answer: What’s Your Greatest Strength?
- 12 Secrets to Writing an Irresistible PA School Personal Statement
- 7 Rules You Must Follow While Writing Your PA School Essay
- You Have 625 Words and 2.5 Minutes to Get Into PA School: Use Them Wisely
- What’s Your #1 Personal Statement Struggle?
- 31 (NEW) CASPA PA School Personal Statement Examples
- How to Prepare for Your PA School Interview Day Essay
- Should You Write Physician Associate or Physician Assistant on Your PA School Essay?
- Meet the World’s Sexiest PA School Applicants
- PA School Reapplicants: How to Rewrite Your PA School Essay for Guaranteed Success
- How to Write a Personal Statement Intro that Readers Want to Read
- PA School Reapplicant Personal Statement Checklist
- How to Deal with Bad News in Your Personal Statement
- Inside Out: How to use Pixar’s Rules of Storytelling to Improve your PA Personal Statement
- Ratatouille: A Pixar Recipe for PA School Personal Statement Success
- Personal Statement Panel Review (Replay)
- Mind Mapping: A Tool for Personal Statements, Supplemental Essays, and Interviews
- Start at the End: Advice for your PA School Personal Statement
Julie says
A five-year-old girl was playing a simple, yet fun, game of hide and seek in the flea market with her cousins. It was all fun and games until she was walking across the aisle and a cherry red truck struck her. The truck happened to run over her left leg, right above the ankle. Frightened, the little girl asked the manager of the flea market to put a band-aid on the cut and no need to call anyone especially her parents. The manager still decided to inform her parents and called 9-1-1. Ambulance arrived with their paramedics and waited until her parents came to transport her to the hospital. In the ambulance, the paramedics gave the five year old a stuffed monkey to calm her down, in which she hugged tight and fell asleep. When she woke up, she was in the hospital bed with her parent’s by the side. She overheard her parents talking about surgery and whether or not they are going to sign off on the potential of having surgery. She was relieved that the doctor decided to place a cast on the broken leg and allowing it to heal on its own. She was even allowed her to choose the color of the cast she wanted. A couple of months passed and it was time to remove the cast. The little girl was frightened of the thought of a saw cutting the cast. The person who was tasked with cutting the cast was very understanding and comforting; he allowed the frightened young girl to choose the size of the blade even though the smaller blade will take a longer time. She, of course, chose the smaller blade compared to the bigger blade and was able to get her cast taken off and her ankle healed properly.
I was the little girl who experienced the wonderful and comforting medical services. I felt the kindness of healthcare workers from the time I was in the ambulance to the time I was getting my cast taken off. After this experience, I knew I wanted to work in the medical field and essentially repay the kindness and making another child or person not afraid of going to the doctors.
My parents’ immigrated here to America before I was born. Thus, as I was maturing in age, I always wanted to become either a doctor or a nurse because that was all I knew as part of the medical field. My parents were not well versed in the differences healthcare professions; they also only knew of doctors and nurses.
I did not start learning about other healthcare professions until I started college and learning from my peers the different positions that they are interested in. Although I started to learn about the different professions, it was not until working at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Medical Center as a temporary administrative assistant that I knew about the differences in different healthcare professions. This is because I became in contact with the various people who are working in those positions at the hepatology clinic I was assigned.
Wanting to be more involved in patient care, I started taking evening and weekend classes to become a clinical medical assistant while still working as an administrative assistant in the hepatology department. Throughout the course, I learned about various aspects of what becoming a medical assistant entails. I gained insight on how to work with different patients and how to be aware of the differences of patients. After the course, I took my certification and passed. The journey of finding a medical assistant job commences. I was fortunate because the hepatology department, of which i was a temporary worker for them, was hiring a medical assistant.
Becoming a medical assistant, I strengthened many of my traits. I became more compassionate, caring and becoming a better listener. Working with patients within the hepatology department, I converse with many people and it makes me want to help them more or find out ways to help them effectively. Hearing their stories about how they contracted the virus, how their life is with their condition, and just about their personal life makes me more empathetic about their situation. These traits would improve my patient interactions and will positively affect the care I would give when I become a physician assistant.
UCSF is a teaching hospital which I benefitted in the aspect of gaining the ability to be in contact with many professions, especially physician assistants. This reinforced my desire to become a physician assistant. I was able to witness interactions between the patient and physician assistant. I witnessed the physician assistant’s empathy and how they were able to spend the time needed to discuss the patient’s questions and concerns. I learned that they are able to both have a satisfying career and a thriving personal life. Although, when I was five years old, I wanted to become a doctor, I have grown to develop my knowledge the different professions and now wanting to become a physician assistant. However, throughout my school years, I remained wanting to start a career in the medical field and helping someone feel as comfortable as I did in a menacing situation.
Amber says
My dad laid on the hospital bed with a grin on his face prior to just having a life threatening heart attack. He always knew exactly how to act to fool my mother into thinking that he was not frightened. At the time I was only 16 years old and my interest in medicine was just beginning. Doctors were walking in and out of his room but no one was telling us what was happening. I was worried and I wanted to speak to someone to get an update about my father’s health. Both my mother and father, who moved to the United States when they were teenagers had broken English and didn’t understand much medical terminology. They were relying on me to find out what was happening. Finally, I encountered a nice middle aged women who at the time I thought was my dad’s doctor. She introduced herself as Nancy, a physician assistant working with my father. She explained to me that two of my dad’s arteries were too clogged to function properly and that they needed to perform a double bypass surgery. I asked her question after question trying to get a better understanding of what that meant. I remember her telling me that it was a common but serious open heart surgery. I tried to explain to my mother what was going on as best as I could but she was in a state of shock and was not reacting well to anything I said. Finally, the physician assistant sat down with her and talked to my mother in a way she understood. She took so much time with us explaining everything very thoroughly. I felt a huge weight was lifted off my mother’s shoulders and I noticed my dad in a more comfortable state. Then we found out that she would be assisting in my father’s surgery. Through her empathetic communication we felt my dad was in good hands and we were not wrong about this. Four hours later and we saw Nancy walking towards us with a smile on her face that immediately gave me a sense of comfort. “Your dad’s surgery was successful”. With those five words I let out a huge sigh of relief. From the bottom of my heart I could truly say that Nancy made a difference in my family’s life. Not only did she assist in the operating room to save my father’s life but her kindness and compassion towards my family reassured us that everything was going to be okay. From this day forward, I knew I wanted to make that kind of impact on people’s lives.
I began to do further research on physician assistants and I became more drawn to the profession each day. After graduating high school, I got a job at Pearle Vision as an optometric technician. Working here allowed me to work with the patients one on one before they saw the doctor. Everything about working directly with the patient was rewarding to me. At the time my sister was applying to PA programs around the country and a few years back she became a certified physician assistant. This was exciting for me because I knew I wanted to shadow her as soon as I had the opportunity to do so which is exactly what I did. I shadowed my older sister at the urgent care for over five months. In these five months, you could say I fell in love with the profession. I got to observe a brilliant PA as she interacted with over 20 patients each day by actively listening to their complaints, answering their questions, and providing them with emotional and physical care. These are just some of the characteristics of a high quality PA that caught my attention. However, I am aware that the career requires a vast amount of medical knowledge in order to aid patients back to a healthy state. My interest in the human body encourages me to seek a deeper understanding of how it works. The body and how it functions is what excites me. I would love to share my knowledge of the human body and educate my patients as well as teach them how to make healthy lifestyle decisions. I am drawn to the fact that a PA has the opportunity to choose from a variety of specialties. This will give me a great advantage to freely move around different specialties to further enhance my knowledge in the field of medicine.
Another very significant aspect of why I would like to pursue a career as a physician assistant is to help the medically underserved, low income populations. Every person should get nothing but the best care regardless of their financial status. Often times patients living in vulnerable areas are prone to disease and chronic illnesses. I would like to personally contribute to helping these families through my personable skills and hands on care. I would love to develop strategies for these individuals that will help them take control of their health.
All in all, my choice to become a physician assistant is rooted in helping others and giving them hope. Watching my sister is what finalized my decision to pursue this career. I would like to one day educate my patients and contribute to their healthcare with the same admirable passion that she showed with each and every individual. I am confident that my thirst in knowledge, generosity, compassion, and wholeheartedly personality will one day make me an excellent physician assistant.
Renee says
“Pellegrini, we got a 9-Line coming in,” the duty sergeant’s voice wakes me. “I’m up,” I reply and jump into my boots, 20 minutes later we are airborne. A team sergeant carried his medic, shot in the head by a sniper, miles until the PJ’s could pick them up, stabilize and transfer them from their helicopter to us on our C-130. We were ready, Doc and F, our RN, transferred Chris to the ventilator, set the IV pumps, and Doc continued the assessment. I transferred the IV lines, placed the cardiac leads, pulse oximeter and prepared to insert the Foley while Josh secured Chris’s litter to the floor. We clipped into the floor rings, gave thumbs up, and took off en route to Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. Each mission no matter how routine or complex relied on the strength of our team. We learned each other’s strengths, weaknesses, and capabilities and we functioned like a well-tuned orchestra.
My patient experience ranges from orthopedics where I also learned casting techniques and X-ray, to the internal medicine specialties of cardiology, allergy, and infectious disease, and labor and delivery. Madigan Army Medical Center was an enriching opportunity where I could expand my LPN skill base in a well-supervised teaching hospital. I learned alongside the residents and then taught my skills to others. I garnered trauma and emergency medicine experience. And I can remain calm and focused even in combat conditions. I am also a licensed massage practitioner and have had success in pain reduction without the use of narcotics particularly in patients with external fixators.
What I will bring to the PA program is a varied medical career, ingenuity and a variety of people skills from my concurrent professions as an aeromedical evacuation technician in the Air Force Reserve and as a flight attendant. I joined AA after my first deployment in support of Desert Shield/Storm. It was the first activation of troops since Vietnam and there were several cracks reservists fell into post-deployment, my job at M among them. But I found the best of both worlds, med-evac that allowed me rewarding hands-on patient care and a career where I could interact with a diverse group of people and cultures in a more social aspect. It was also easier to manage multiple deployments with hundreds of flight attendants for shift coverage instead of one other mid-shift nurse.
My Afghanistan tour in 2012 was incredible and also unbelievably difficult. It challenged me in the high acuity of injuries but also in my military leadership role. We flew unregulated medevac, which means we provided life-saving care to everyone regardless of military affiliation, including civilians and sometimes children who were victims of left behind Soviet landmines and IEDs. Only one member of our team could speak a little Pashtu, so I found and disseminated necessary medical phrases in Pashtu (phonetically spelled), so we could communicate and deliver better care. It was also my responsibility to guide the NCOs and junior officers to see and respect every life as valuable and deserving of our care and to utilize our teams and support staff to help us manage the challenges of combat and cultural differences. Those wide-ranging experiences and my conversations with Doc solidified for me that it was time to return to school and further my medical training to become a physician assistant.
Multiple deployments were not compatible with the rigors of formal education, so I retired from the military in July 2013 and was researching the PA school requirements when I had my own life altering injury. I severely damaged ligaments of my pelvic girdle and tore a few hip flexor and gluteal muscles for good measure. I went from being very physically active and fit, I trained CrossFit with the Marines while in Afghanistan, to learning how to lift my leg and walk normally again. I am thankful to my healthcare team for giving me the tools and support I needed to overcome this challenge allowing me to start my prerequisites for the PA program last summer. During the academic year, I underwent several procedures for my injury and lost my mother to cancer. I have had a successful academic year and I help my fellow students by leading study groups and have forged real friendships. I also accepted a position as a student instructor at Pierce College for Bio 242 at the request of the professor.
I am ready for the next level of health care and I have examined all of the options. The mid-level providers I have worked closely with are nurse practitioners many of whom have encouraged me in that direction. The independent practice of nurse practitioners is undeniably appealing, but the team concept and close working relationship with a supervising physician provide a level of partnership and autonomy that align with the model of medicine I have a high degree of success with and want to continue.
Kiesha says
“Ma’am, we believe your daughter may have Marfan’s syndrome and we need to send her to evaluated.” The little girl continued to sit there swing her legs off the end of the table as her mother began asking a flurry of questions, within an hour the pair were making their way to list of specialist. As the little girl went from doctor to doctor listening and watching them work her fascination continued to grow along with the understanding of the disease she was told she had. At her last stop with orthopedics they looked at her joints, had her preform numerous functional test and then sent her for a full body CT scan. The orthopedist came in began to inform them, “Ma’am, after all the testing and results we have received, it appears that all your daughter’s organs and ligaments are normal, and actually functioning at high levels which is great for her age, she’s very healthy… However, we did find one abnormality which raises high concern. Your daughter’s scan showed renal agenesis…”. I was 10 at the time I was diagnosed with originally Marfan’s syndrome which was later contributed to hypermobility syndrome, but also another medical issue, renal agenesis. A condition that is not necessarily life threatening but one I must be aware of at all times.
I knew at a young age that I wanted to work in the medical field and I loved playing sports. These two things became my fascination and passion, which only continued to grow as I did. I spent all my time fascinated with the human body, what causes diseases and tissue damage, it’s healing processes and so on as well as having the competitive nature to sports along with understanding of leadership, teamwork and the importance and ability to work independently. I had determined by my sophomore year of high school that I was going to work as either a physician or therapist. I worked hard during my undergraduate years, running division I track and field while working 2-3 jobs. I was able to graduate in 3 years with a decent GPA, however it wasn’t a good reflection of my abilities due to spreading myself thin over those years with work, athletics and classwork. Nonetheless, I completed a few internships and then set off for my masters in Athletic Training. Which would turn into a gateway for meeting numerous physician assistants that would change my life and my understanding of the profession.
During my time in graduate school I worked alongside a number of physician assistants dealing with athletic training, orthopedic and emergency medicine. I even was lucky enough to be treated by our colleges team orthopedic physician and his physician assistants as I severed my tibial plateau while playing a game of football. The physician assistants asked a number of questions to my mechanism of injury and how it was possible, and in return I asked my plethora of question on what they did during surgery and the processes.
Upon graduating I began working at a high school in inner city fort worth as the only athletic trainer for a 5A high school. Every day I was placed in situations where I was constantly engaged in providing medical treatment to the students. However, I spent a number of times explaining to students, their parents and myself why they still had to go see and physician. Often times knowing exactly what’s wrong with my students and not being able to help them further posed a serious frustration. In an incident during a football game I evaluated an athlete who had recently transferred to our school who was complaining of abdominal pain and back pain, but he was never hit from behind. He argued with me that the pain was bearable and it only hurt when he tensed up he wanted to return to playing, I explained to him and the coaches I had a bad feeling and wasn’t going to let him return. I contacted his parents during halftime after seeing bruising on his abdomen only to find out he recently had mononucleosis. He had ruptured his liver during the game and had to have surgery. Outside of identifying his injury there was nothing more I could do, which frustrated me.
Through my time as an athletic trainer I grew to love and be fascianated even more with the world or orthopedic and emergency medicine. Having built a close relationship with the physicians and physician assistants at the orthopedic office they knew when an athlete was sent from me it was for clearance of an injury or because there was a need for diagnostic evaluations that I did not have access to.
While some often question “why” I want to pursue this career I explain, I do not want to be limited to simply diagnosis and handling minor injuries, but rather being able to diagnosis and provide treatment to all types of health problems without the restrictions, the lack of equipment and resources. As a physician assistant I would have the flexibility to work in a number of areas in order to assist in a variety of healing processes. But most importantly to me as a physician assistant is their ability to build relationships with their patients more often than I’ve seen physicians do. Which I strongly believe can greatly contributes to making a diagnosing a lot easier than just reading charts and test results at times.
With such a passion for the line of work I currently do and the desire to expand I want to place my focus as a physician assistant into emergency medicine and orthopedics, where I can utilize my current abilities and my newly acquired abilities to save lives, even if not in the literal sense all the time. Having sent a number of athletes to seek medical attention for fractured bones and torn ligaments and muscles along with deal with a number of medical issues not limited to anaphylaxis and respiratory failure I want to exceed from only treating athletes to treating all alike who suffer from a issue.
topher jackson says
please and thank you
The ground shook at the table and dust seasoned my scrambled eggs. Pieces fell from the ceiling and a wave washed over everyone in the room. I would have to leave my breakfast behind today. I ran to put on my body armor and back to the cafeteria where some people had already begun rearranging the area to receive casualties. Others, however, sat puzzled debating on finishing their meal. I announced to the room “Anyone who is not part of the mass casualty team needs to leave this area, stay in cover and get your gear if you can without going outside!” Others from the team started to arrive and we waited for the call over the compound speaker system. I paused to reflect on the things that had prepared me for this.
In 2011 I went to the Philippine Islands to visit my family. My uncle was a dentist there and upon learning that I was a medic, invited me to a medical mission. He said I would mostly help him doing tooth extractions. I jumped at the chance work with him. Our stage was a cement basketball court with stone bleachers and overgrown foliage attending most of the stands. My uncle gave me a quick lesson on the medications and tools he used. There were so many people who attended that he decided I should start my own line to do vitals and initial assessments. Eventually, he graduated me to anesthetics and suturing until he walked me through a couple extractions and I was treating people independently. One of the children cried when I pulled his tooth but when I asked if he was hurt he just kept saying “thank you” through a mouth full of cotton balls. It was a lot of fun working with the nurses, nursing students and physicians as well as my dentist uncle and his colleagues. Treating people felt natural and I glad that I was a part of that.
In 2013 I was taking Anatomy and Physiology III as a prerequisite into the nursing program at a community college in Bend, Oregon when I was informed of my upcoming deployment in 2014. I broke the news to the instructors that I wouldn’t be joining the program after all but that I would still finish the current year. They were supportive and pleaded for me to reapply when I returned. There were a lot of premobilization tasks to be done and many of them took me away from my home in Bend to go 150 miles away to Springfield. I expressed my concerns that the interruptions would affect my coursework. My instructor was very understanding and told me something that replenished my confidence. “You’re a great mind Chris. You can do well at anything, you’ll be just fine.” It was nice to know that that others were so confident in me.
Before the deployment in early 2014, since I wasn’t going to school, I got my CNA license and worked at an assisted living facility near my home. There, I met many interesting residents who I learned a lot from. My last shift before the deployment I spent most of my time with Minna. She was originally from the Philippines but hadn’t been back in a very long time. We shared that common heritage and she would ask me about how things were there. She held my hand as we walked to her chair and I set up her plate for dinner one day. I sat at the desk in the corner and ate while we reminisced. Before I left she had a present for me. It was a painting that she had made. “I want you to have it” She told me. I smiled watery eyed and hugged her. I said I’d visit when I came back. She returned a watery eyed smile and said “Do good things”.
The suicide bomber had exploded his car against a convoy of vehicles that were along one of the walls of the compound I was in. There was a lack of Medical officers for all the immediate level casualties and people were neglecting to follow the protocol we had set in place for patient flow due to the chaos. We did the best care for the most people that we could. I told my junior medics I was proud of them and that they made a big difference. I said that there are hearts beating because of the good work that they did. I talked to my medical officer, who is a physician’s assistant about PA schools and what help I could get. He told me about the CASPA and the programs that were in Oregon.
When I got home, Minna had already passed and I returned to the local community college to finish the last classes that I would need for PA school. In honor of the skills I possess and the work that people have put into nurturing me, I have decided to pursue medicine. I’m confident that I have the qualities it takes to be successful in this program. I have no doubt that I will become a successful PA, and I am sure that I will provide good care. Once I finish the program I will hang my diploma next to Minna’s painting on my wall and I know that I will make her proud. I want to become a PA to learn the skills to provide that higher level of care.
TEGEST says
My life changed dramatically with one event in September 2012. My father suffered a massive stroke that led to permanent paralysis on the left side of his body. Immediately I was transformed from a young graduate student into the chief medical decision maker for another individual. While I was facilitator in the past for other’s health needs, I was now the primary advocate for my father. As a caregiver I had to learn how to submit insurance claims, manage finances and even cut hair with an electric razor. Although tragic, this experience has influenced my appreciation of the non clinical aspects of delivering care that would inform my patient interaction.
The decision to sacrifice my social life and temporarily halt my academic pursuits was not difficult. Throughout my life I witnessed my parents invest so much of themselves into others. Before his illness, my father volunteered his time to Ethiopian immigrants. On his own, my father became an expert in immigrating Ethiopians into the United States and provided free advice to members of the community. We spent many hours after church answering questions and helping complete paperwork. My father, whose full-time job was at a sugar laboratory, has reunited children, spouses and friends, all without any compensation. My passion for helping others originated from my parents’ focus on empathy towards those in need. I chose to become a caregiver because I am capable of putting someone else’s needs before my own. I have inherited altruistic characteristics that are reflective of a compassionate health provider. I hope to preserve my father’s legacy for helping others, given the opportunity to train to become a Physician Assistant (PA).
Through my father’s illness, I also learned how to distill dense clinical concepts into messages that the rest of my family could understand. For example, explaining to my non-English speaking aunts and uncles that my father’ may not have the same personality or capacity to understand complex ideas any longer. I had to be mindful as I balanced updates with cultural nuances. This position taught me to be empathetic yet direct when conveying information about an individual’s health. Ultimately, I aspire to work with underserved minorities and am confident this communication dynamic will be helpful amongst these communities.
Although my first exposure to the PA profession was while obtaining my EMT certification; the most impactful encounter I had was with a PA that treated my father. During his transition out of an acute hospital setting into a subacute facility, the PA that handled his care served as his strongest advocate. She managed his medication, spoke directly to the receiving facility, participated in coordinating his rehabilitation and linked us with social services. She alleviated the stress involved when being discharged from one facility, and admitted into another. I felt as if she genuinely cared; she gave me the impression that my father was just as important to her as he was to my family. She had the option to supply us with all the information via paperwork, but instead personally navigated us throughout the changeover. I wholeheartedly believe I can become a patient advocate for others while dispensing medical care, as I’ve seen other PA’s. After this specific experience I envisioned myself in the PA profession.
While shadowing a team of PA’s I was exposed to more highly trained and dedicated providers. Community Medical is located in Elizabeth, NJ, home to residents that face economic hardships and have limited access to doctors. The majority of the patients were of low socioeconomic backgrounds and spoke little english. The PAs struggled with lack of patient compliance, understanding of information and follow ups. This required the PAs to provide care in a unique way. For example, many services were offered in the office, such as X-rays, drug screenings or podiatric counseling. To accommodate spanish-speaking patients most of the administrative staff and PAs were bilingual. In addition, the office hours extended into the early evening and weekends to cater to those who worked during the day. I was impressed by the amount of devotion the clinicians had in assuring patients receive the best care possible. I also noticed positive feedback from most of the people treated at Community Medical and aspire to have the same evaluation from my patients in the future. This experience strengthened my desire to work in underprivileged communities, while reinforcing my goal to become a PA.
My life changed dramatically with one event in 2012. Though it has been difficult to see a family member struggle with their health, I am at least comforted by the impact my father’s health crisis has had upon me. As a primary caregiver, my inclination towards advocacy has been enhanced tremendously. This role has exposed my qualities of humility and selflessness that I believe are necessary for a career as a Physician’s Assistant.
Kimberly says
This is my first draft, I am slightly over on my character count and could use some help.
When I saw that I was required to write an essay describing why I want to a physician assistant and why I am a better choice than the next guy, I was a bit taken back. I sat for lengthy periods of time thinking about my past and all lives I have touched. Growing up my family was never what you would call supportive of education, I recall many a night my father telling me “don’t worry about school honey just make sure you marry well”, “you’ll never make anything of yourself anyway”, “your mother never even graduated high school and you’re just like her.” Reflecting on my childhood made think I was crazy to even try to apply. But then I realized even after the years of psychological and physical abuse, all the moving around, all the ups and downs and bad decisions, I still managed to prove him wrong.
I may have taken a long and twisted path to get here but I made it. I took responsibility for decisions and my life, I know I am meant for something greater. I knew I needed to start somewhere, so I enrolled in a GED class and got my high school diploma. The first time I proved them wrong!
I cut ties with those that did not have faith in me and held me back. I packed up and moved to Florida. As a single mother with two children to care for, I needed to find a career I loved and that would afford me the ability to care for my children on my own. I decided I wanted to be in health care, I have always taken care of the people around me and health care was the perfect opportunity for me to expand that passion. I picked myself up and enrolled in vocational school. I worked three part-time jobs while in school for practical nursing and managed to get decent grades along the way. I graduated, passed my boards, and landed my first nursing job. The second time I proved them wrong!
I worked for few years and loved nursing but still felt I should be doing more. I had a few coworkers and employers tell me I should go back to school that I was so smart I shouldn’t stop. So, I enrolled in college for my associates degree in nursing. I worked fulltime, took care of my children, and went to school fulltime, I was thriving! I was two semesters away from finishing when I tore my ACL and was unable to take part in the clinical rotations. I was devastated. I spent 13 weeks going through physical therapy before I was finally released to go back to work. It taught me a valuable lesson, just because you can do something does not always mean you should. During my 13 weeks home, I realized I was not taking care of my children while I was pursuing my goals, they had become unruly in my absence. I decided not to return to school at that time and focus more on my family and job.
Years went by quickly; my children have grown and now have families of their own. I found myself working in an outpatient oncology clinic, this is where I had my first real interactions with physician assistants. I had never been exposed to the profession, most of my experience was with nurse practitioners and doctors. I was fascinated with the idea of a career where I could still spend time with patients while gathering information, diagnosing, treating, and educating them on how to live healthier lifestyles. As a nurse, I can educate and give the prescribed treatments but I want to solve the puzzle. I want to be the one who puts all the pieces together, finds the problem, and educates on how to fix the problem. The physician assistants I work with are the front lines, they spend time with patients gathering health history and educating patients on their diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis.
One day I decided to ask one of the physician assistants about her job and how she became a P.A. We had a long talk about all the schooling needed and what all her job entailed. It struck me deep inside, I knew this was what I wanted. I enrolled in my undergraduate program. I worked fulltime while I attended classes fulltime and maintained a 4.0 GPA. I spent every minute researching and studying. Then I got a call, my mother had been rushed to the hospital with a perforated bowel in septic shock. I had to withdraw from school and drive to Alabama. She spent three weeks in ICU in a little rural hospital, the care was not the greatest but she made it through. When I returned home I thought about everything that had happened. Why when I was so close to being finished, yet another medical issue, was this Gods way of telling me to stop? Then I realized, there was a reason for all of it, in the three weeks I spent sitting bedside in the hospital I never saw one P. A. The care was lackluster because the doctors were so overwhelmed, one hospitalist for the whole place working seven days on seven days off. That revelation cemented in my mind that I was needed as a physician assistant. I returned to school and continued my studies, a semester behind where I wanted to be but determined to see it through. I was awarded the 2016 Biomedical Science student of the year and graduated Summa cum laude with a perfect 4.0. I am now ready for the next step.
Miranda says
Hello, this is my first attempt at this. Thank you in advance.
“I think I’m having a heart attack.” Those were the last words a distraught wife heard from her husband before he collapsed to the ground. 911 was called, coded for a simple “fall”; the wife thought he had simply fainted. When Detroit EMS arrived, the husband-turned-patient was face down on the floor, no pulses present, agonal respirations heard. He had self-diagnosed himself and was in cardiac arrest. Being a basic (BLS) unit at the time, we had no drugs to help our patient. No epinephrine to help his heart out. No monitor to be able to physically analyze the heart rhythm and deliver shocks faster, rather than wait for a machine to decipher whether it’s a “shockable rhythm”. All we had at our disposal was rib-shattering chest compressions, an airway secured with supplemental oxygen to breathe for him and a standard AED. 5 rounds of compressions and 2 shocks later, we were at the hospital. Doctors in the resuscitation room asked why we didn’t give epinephrine. “We’re a basic unit.” I felt utterly helpless.
Cut to another patient; this one is a 20-something male sprawled out on the floor at his job, unconscious. All vitals are normal, sugar normal, pupils are dilated. No witnesses of what happened, no drug paraphernalia, no trauma evident. Everybody was baffled as to what had happened. We loaded him up and coded him to the hospital, with no change. Our patient was still unresponsive, and we had nothing that we could do for him. No other tests that we could run, no diagnosis obvious. Helpless, yet again.
Being involved in public safety for the Detroit Fire Department, you see a wide array of calls. From an elderly grandmother who is having a stroke, to a 20-something guy with the flu but has no car to drive himself, to a married couple that got mangled in a car accident. It doesn’t matter what the call is, we help everybody in the city. But as EMS, we can only do so much. We’re a one-way ticket to the hospital, and once we reach our destination other health care professionals take over. I want to be able to do more and actually help the patients beyond keeping them alive and stable until we get to the hospital. I want to be able to diagnose and then proceed to treat more conditions than simple hypoglycemia or opiate overdose. I don’t want to ever feel helpless again.
I’ll admit I didn’t always know I wanted to be a physician assistant (PA). My family has a slew of health issues, so I knew at a young age that I wanted to go into the medical field and be of service to others, I was just unsure of the subject to pursue. My earliest encounter with a PA came when I was in middle school and experiencing horrible abdominal pain. My primary care physician ordered a multitude of tests, excluding testing for the bacteria Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori); all came back negative. A year later, my doctor was out of town so I saw a PA instead. I was still having abdominal issues, so she ran all the tests again. This time, however, the tests included H. pylori; it came back positive. I finally had a diagnosis of what was wrong. She inspired me because she actually listened to her patients and checked for everything, searching for any possible etiology. You could tell she cared a great deal about her patients.
While I was going to college, my friend got accepted into a PA program out of state. Hearing her talk about the profession, about how PA’s are versatile, knowledgeable, experienced in direct patient care and are in relatively high demand. She loved it already, and she wasn’t even a certified PA yet. Seeing that much passion in both a family care PA and a PA student made me desire to become one as well.
I enjoyed shadowing the PA that worked in adult medicine; she dealt with the new admissions that came from the Emergency Center (EC). Working in emergency for so long, in my eyes she had the ‘puzzle’ patients that the EC staff couldn’t readily figure out. The patients that require more testing and long-term care to procure a diagnosis and be able to fix it. It was a different world than emergency, but still just as interesting. There was only one doctor on call if case anyone had a question, but he trusts his PA’s with all of the direct patient care and to make the right decisions regarding patient care and consult him if necessary. Patient care and versatility make the PA stand above the rest in my eyes.
Working in EMS, you can never shake the “what if” feeling. What if you had done something else, would your patient still be alive. Being an EMT-Basic is even worse, as there’s a plethora of drugs available now to help people. If I had been a paramedic, would that wife had gotten her husband back? It’s a game of chance and you hardly ever know the outcome. Anywhere in the medical field would be the same game, including PA. However, it’s a gamble I chose 3 years ago when I first obtained my EMT license and I haven’t regretted a single day. I hope to continue to thrive in the medical field.
natalie says
Hello, this is my draft and any feedback helps. Thank you for your time!
Puberty is a trying time in many adolescents’ lives. While it was trying for me, it was also inspirational. I remember the acne that came along with that stage; it was not something I could easily accept. Over the years, my acne progressively worsened. My face transitioned from a smooth canvas to a bubbly, greasy, irritated plateau riddled with bumps. I decided it was time to visit a dermatologist. The clinician I met with was a physician assistant (PA) who expressed compassion and empathy while treating my skin. While I was feeling emotional about my skin and nervous about the skin treatments, the PA was patient and understanding. She was honest and explained to me the procedures as well as the expected results for my chronic condition. Knowing what the best treatment for my diagnosis was led her to restoring my healthy skin. It was her intellect and professionalism that led me to appreciate and admire her and the PA profession.
My early experiences with PAs did not end there. I was hospitalized for bilateral pyelonephritis. The urology PAs went above and beyond and took it upon themselves to educate me on my disease state. They addressed my concerns and comforted me emotionally with self-assurance and support. I recall two PAs taking time from their day to play ‘Mad Libs’ with me and encouraging me to stay positive during a difficult time. This showed me that their profession is not limited to an eight hour shift, but rather it is a continuous effort when it comes to personal care. The positive energy, multidisciplinary approach, and empathy that was evident by the care I received further amplified my appreciation for the profession. It was those moments during my pubescent years that played such a dominant role in my dreams of pursuing a career as a PA.
While my adolescent years played a huge role in my aspirations of becoming a PA, I knew from a young age that I wanted to pursue a career in medicine. The human body fascinated me; it is so complex, but yet so fragile. I ventured into the healthcare field in order to get a better grasp of what it entails. I worked closely with a physician at a private cardiology office affiliated with “The Brooklyn Hospital Center.” Moreover, I shadowed PAs in the emergency room and assisted in several surgical subspecialties at NYU Lutheran Medical Center. While I shadowed and worked closely with other practitioners over the years, I got more involved and had diverse experiences while working closely with PAs. I was impressed by the multiple surgical and clinical subspecialties they worked in and noticed how passionate they were about the growing profession. I also noticed that PAs take a more personal approach thus creating meaningful relationships with the patients, which allows them to provide the best care possible. Those aspects increased my desire to pursue a PA career.
While shadowing PAs and volunteering in the surgery and emergency room, I became accustomed to the workflow of the stressful and labor intensive environment. I was impressed by the team collaboration and how PAs were able to handle multiple tasks, see several patients, and make decisions in a limited amount of time. The PA-patient interaction and the rapid decision making that I witnessed in the emergency room provided an adrenaline rush that inspired me to gain BLS skills and become an EMT. Working for BRAVO Volunteer Ambulance further motivated me to become a PA. I became familiar with the medications and diseases and I always found myself interested in the patient’s diagnosis. As well, it has allowed me to feel confident and be mentally prepared to treat any patient with a life-threatening emergency. For example, my EMT partner and I went to a call for a patient that went into respiratory arrest. We ensured her airway was secured by inserting an OPA, followed by high flow oxygen. Such collaboration and ability to respond quickly as a team allowed us to save her life, as we rushed her to the nearest hospital. Team collaboration, effective communication, and emotional stability are skills that will ensure my success as a future physician assistant.
My responsibilities are not limited to the medical field. As Vice President of the St. George’s Church Youth Organization, I assisted in fundraisers for Syrian refugees and families impacted by the Syrian Civil War. As a proud member of SAWA, our donations contributed to buying wheelchairs for the disabled Syrian victims. Giving back to the community has increased my awareness of the unprivileged. I learned to respect and accommodate each individual equally, regardless of their diagnosis, financial, cultural, or religious background.
Balancing my responsibilities has taught me time management, which is an invaluable asset for my career moving forward. My work ethic has strengthened with every experience I have faced. Although I performed poorly in Biology during freshmen year of college, I challenged myself to repeat the course and received an A. I used this learning experience as a motivation to succeed in my future classes and as a reminder that the journey to success comes with bumps in the road. However, with determination and passion, anything can be achieved.
Pursuing a career as a PA gives me the privilege to be a life-long learner and to be challenged intellectually since medicine is dynamic and constantly evolving. I have the opportunity to work in a range of specialties, in rural and underserved settings. I am an avid learner that is devoted to providing my future patients with the care they deserve. As well, I prefer to collaborate as a team and to ask for a second opinion from a supervisor, to provide the best treatment plan for patients.
Lauren says
Here is my first draft of my completed personal statement. Thank you for your consideration and comments.
Every child is plagued with the question “what do you want to be when you grow up?” Whether it is their parents, teachers, relatives, or friends, they can never escape without having to have an answer. For me, I could not fully commit to one profession. My answer always was “to help others.” I had the desire to be a veterinarian because I could help animals who were unable to help themselves. I could provide comfort for their owners in a time of need, and find solutions to problems for them. As I grew up, I realized I could not be a veterinarian. My love for animals prevented me from being able to deliver the news to a child that I could not save their childhood pet. However, my overwhelming desire to help remained. Once in high school, I stumbled on the pharmacy profession through working at an independent pharmacy as a cashier. I was intrigued by their knowledge of medications used to treat different disease states, and thought this was more up my alley. I focused on my grades and extracurriculars, and was offered admittance to an undergraduate university as a Pre-Admit student into their pharmacy program. I was elated, and thought this was a step in the right direction. However, upon entering the pharmacy school, my vision changed.
I had been in the Doctorate of Pharmacy program for almost three months, and could not see myself as a pharmacist. The desire and passion had gone out of me after listening to the countless pharmacists explain their careers in the roundtables provided for the graduate students. While pharmacists help patients with medications and their questions regarding them, I realized I also desired a critical thinking position that will allow me to utilize other members of a healthcare team to formulate a treatment plan for a patient. Pharmacy did not fit the bill for me. It was in my Biomedical Sciences class that I felt compelled to explore some other healthcare opportunities available. After doing so and talking with a current physician assistant student, I realized where my heart truly lies. I was determined to gain the knowledge and skills necessary to become a physician assistant.
In December 2015, I came home after completing my first semester of pharmacy school and got straight to work. I enrolled in a Certified Nursing Assistant class and the few pre-requisite courses needed for the physician assistant program. After graduation, I accepted a Medical Assistant position with Patient First in June 2016 and have grown since being hired. It is a fast-paced, high-energy position that allows me to work with laboratory technicians, radiology technicians, physicians, physician assistants, and nurses. The collaboration between the various professions is astounding to watch – they all have the same goal of providing the best care for every patient. I was intrigued by the physician assistants specifically because they are responsible for a patient care plan, including gathering a health history, diagnosing the patient and creating a care plan. However, they have a physician to discuss options with if the need arises.
One shadowing experience opened my eyes to a palliative care opportunity available to physician assistants. The physician assistant works in a Rehabilitation and Long-Term Care facility where she is responsible for establishing care plans for patients needing to regain their activities of daily living, while also caring for patients who will not leave the facility. It was inspiring to see and understand how she balances the workload, while taking each patient case individually and giving them her full attention. It is rewarding to know that some of her patients will get to go home and live their life like they did before their accident or medical condition.
The physician assistant career is more than a job – it is a calling. It takes a certain type of person to be able understand someone’s’ pain and suffering, work with them and their fears about medicine, and come out with a positive result. Through my experiences I have been able to see what drives others to the profession, and now fully understand why I desire to be among them. I crave the autonomy the path provides, but also respect having another healthcare professional to ask questions to if I get stuck on a patient case. The flexibility will allow me the opportunity to explore various job settings and schedules to find the one that fits my lifestyle. The ability of physician assistants to switch specialties is appealing to me because I do not want to be grounded. I like knowing I can work in the Emergency Department setting, but can switch to private practice with a set schedule if my life requires it. Above all, I am passionate about being part of a profession that is focused on providing optimum care for every patient they encounter.
Daniela says
1st Draft Thanks for your help!!
We sat quietly in the exam room looking at one another in the background you could hear the footsteps of nurses and doctors rushing in and out of rooms. My mom always looking quite nervous and uncomfortable to be there. I was eleven years old when I began to serve as my parent’s medical translator. At a very young age, I became familiar with feminine health and watched my mom undergo invasive and private exams. During those visits its as if our roles were reversed and I was responsible for her often standing by her side reassuring her everything would be okay. I would never mind accompanying her to doctors visits hearing medical terms and translating them to Spanish was a challenge I enjoyed. Sitting in that exam room with my parents while skipping school to do so became a common occurrence throughout my childhood, teen years, and adulthood.
I grew up in a small rural community in Southeastern New Mexico where you have to commute to nearby towns to receive healthcare services. It wasn’t hard to notice the number of healthcare disparities my community was facing like the lack of specialty doctors, lack of healthcare coverage, and poor health literacy. When I began to notice these things my interest for science and medicine began to flourish. I enrolled in a dual-credit Phlebotomy program while in high school which fueled my interest to pursue a Bachelors of Science in Biology. While obtaining my Bachelors I felt a little lost being a first generation college student. My grades suffered as a consequence of this because my head wasn’t in it. At one point I even considered changing my major to Secondary Education. I visited middle and high school students interacting with kids who faced challenges similar to mine growing up. I knew I wanted to help people and impact rural communities like the one I grew up in.
In the end my love for science and the motivation for obtaining a career where you are continually learning prevailed. I moved to Phoenix, Arizona a larger metropolitan area after receiving my Bachelors. It was here that I’ve been able to acquire extensive medical knowledge working as a flow cytometry aide in a clinical pathology lab and later as a research technician in Hematology with Mayo Clinic. Working in a lab has always come natural to me as I excelled in the lab courses I took during my time in the university. I have had the privilege to collaborate and acquire knowledge from medical doctors, physician assistants, doctoral students, clinical research coordinators, and fellow technicians. For the past three and a half years I have been handling patient samples and there are a couple of healthcare lessons I learned.
In the clinical lab, I learned that although the patient was not present maintaining the integrity of the sample during processing was imperative. The patient is counting on you to receive the correct lab results and/or diagnosis. When samples arrive at the lab patient’s can be reduced to a name and number on a tube. I would take it upon myself to read every clinical history and summarize it for the Pathologist. Doing so reminded me of the importance of the diagnostic services we were providing not to a nameless John Doe but to a mother, father, sister, or child. My time working in cancer research has taught me an entirely different lesson. Clinical research samples are donated by patients solely for the purpose of advancing medicine. Without these samples creating biobanks would not be possible and therefore experimental data for different diseases could not be collected leaving many illnesses uncured or poorly understood. Even though my work is not hands with the patient I’m impacting the lives of many people by seeking to better understand Multiple Myeloma and find a cure in collaboration with my colleagues.
Becoming a PA was not something I envisioned as a child or even as a college student. A combination of all the experiences listed above is my motivation for applying to PA school today. My experiences have allowed me to discover and appreciate what happens behind the scenes. The things patients do not see but which are vital to their care. Without the technology, research, and individuals who dedicate their lives to advancing science and medical care where would we be? I’m now seeking a medical career where I can continue to collaborate with different health care providers. While having the opportunity to directly interact with patients not to mention practice in a rural community because that’s where my heart is. I want to have the opportunity to ease the fears patients who are undergoing invasive procedures by breaking down those communication barriers my parents so often faced. Lives can be changed through patient education and I cannot help but feel excited that I too can be part of that change by becoming a PA.
Sara says
This is my first draft for my first time applying, I appreciate any constructive criticism!
The first life I ever saved was my own fathers. Recognizing the symptoms, assessing the situation, administering medication in the hopes that I was wrong. Unfortunately, I was right, and my father was admitted to Mary Washington Hospital for a non ST elevated myocardial infarction. The next week was the most harrowing yet blessed week of my life. Blessed, because a 99% blockage was found with some time to spare, harrowing that my father now needed a quadruple coronary artery bypass graft and my mother was out of the country.
I’ll never forget Dr. Harish Chandra pointing out the extremely narrow, barely visible artery to my younger brother and I in the cath lab, and commending me on my efforts to get my father there alive. If I had any doubts about becoming a healthcare provider prior to this event, they were certainly diminished during this time. My place was right where I had made it, diagnosing and treating patients, beginning with my father.
I was raised to value all life on earth, regardless of whether it is human or animal or plant. I was raised to improve that life if needed; to ice and elevate a sprained ankle, to house a malnourished street cat, or to water a wilted plant. It is this value at my core that drives my decision to become an exemplary physician assistant for every life. During my time at Chippenham Medical Center as a medical scribe, I witnessed these values from every physician assistant I worked with. No job was too menial for them, no patient less important than the next. Now as a cardiology medical assistant, it was my turn to offer my patients the same care. Through the positions I have held in healthcare over the last three years, I have gained an immense understanding on emergency medicine as well as cardiology, which help me provide the best care and knowledge to my patients. There is no better feeling than when a patient tells me that they feel educated and are at ease before a cardiac procedure because I was able to explain medications, the procedure, and be honest about outcomes with them beforehand. Seeing a patient leave the office smiling before a procedure that they were full of fear about just a few minutes ago solidifies my reason to become a physician assistant every day.
As a medical assistant, I am already changing lives of patients every day, as I hope to as a well rounded physician assistant. While my grades may not be the most impressive due to a time in college where I did not have direction, I believe my experiences and my drive far outweigh what my GPA says about me. I want to be the physician assistant that is the reason for another student to consider medicine, the type of physician assistant that inspires a child to heal others, the type of physician assistant whose care speaks volumes about her intellectual ability as well as her compassion for her patients.
Kaley says
This is my first draft. Any advise is much appreciated.
Picture this. You are 19 years old, a sophomore in college, majoring and doing amazing in a rigorous under-grad program, getting to know new friends, experiencing the best years of your life. You have everything going for you, the world is in your hands, you have so many opportunities. And it all comes to a halt just like that, in the snap of a finger, you find out you are pregnant at the age of 19, at what seems to be the worst time in your life for this to occur. All your plans and dreams go out the door, you feel as if your world is crashing down… or so I thought.
Finding out I was pregnant at the age of 19 was a feeling I will never forget. Nervousness, failure, disappointment, sadness, I felt it all. The reaction I got from my friends and family was all the same, “you’re never going to be able to finish school, you had so much going for you, your life is going to be changed forever.” I agreed with these words that everyone was telling me. I had so many plans and goals that now seemed unreachable. A certain Google search was what really tore me down the most- “less than 2% of teen moms graduate college by the age of 30”. How would I, out of all people, fall within this 2%. I would never be able to graduate college on time.
But then it hit me, I wasn’t going to let a statistic scare me and hold me back, instead I would use it to drive me forward. I was going to prove every single person in my life who told me I wouldn’t be able to still accomplish my goals and dreams wrong. I was going to put my whole heart and soul into accomplishing all that I had previously hoped for, but I was going to do just that and more. I set the bar even higher than it had previously been. And just like that, my life had taken a complete turn. Partying and socializing was no longer an every weekend thing. Being a Mom was my full-time job. Aside from being at school, I spent all of my time with my son. In between feedings, and during naps, I would squeeze in all the time of studying that I could. In the free time that I had to take a break from being a Mom and go out, I chose to go to Starbucks to study and do homework. Graduating on time was always one of the top priorities on my list. I did everything in my power to make sure that this happened for me. Summer classes, winter classes, taking classes at other colleges so that it fit into my schedule, I did everything that I could to make sure that being a Mom at an unexpected time didn’t set me back but actually push me forward. I was no longer ending my semesters with a 3.4 GPA but now a 4.0. I finally found balance in life. I finally had a purpose, a motivation, someone to live for. On May 21, 2016, I graduated college alongside all of my friends with whom I had started off college as a freshman in 2012 with. I did it- not only for myself, but for my son. As he grows older, I want him to see that no matter the obstacle, if you have the motivation and the heart, you can overcome it.
So where, do you ask, is the want to be a Physician Assistant fit into all of this. It was the influence of the person behind the curtain, or should I say the waiting room door, during this roller-coaster of a ride- my OBGYN, Sarah. She was’t just my OBGYN, she was a friend, my #1 confidant. She pushed me to finish school and pursue my forever dreams in healthcare. She supported me and was there for me when it seemed as though no one else was. She genuinely cared, and not once did she judge. She helped me navigate a job in which I could get a diverse set of patient-care experience prior to attending PA school, and made me realize that my aspiration of being a PA was not in the distance but more so in the forefront. It was clear that she put her whole heart and took much pride into the care in which she provided to her patients. It is these characteristics as I provider that I wish to instill in myself when caring for my own patients someday. I want to connect to my patient’s on a personal level, rather than just a provider-patient level. I want to positively impact my patient’s lives, just as Sarah did mine. “I am only one, but I am one. I cannot do everything, but I can do something. And I will not let what I cannot do interfere with what I can do”- Edward Everett Hale.
Jasmine says
This is my first draft so help is appreciated!
A young man waved at me one day and said, “Hi, what’s your name?” On a rainy day, Nathan was standing in the grass outside playing a game of tetherball as I approached him. We introduced ourselves and began playing and talking about school, work, and our families. I then asked, “It’s pretty cold out, do you want to go inside?” He stopped, stared at me with a perplexed look on his face, and suddenly started falling forward. Putting my EMT skills to the test, I reacted quickly and was able to brace his fall before he hit his head. With grass and dirt all over his wet clothes, he looked up and asked, “Hi, what’s your name?” He had forgotten that he had fallen and why he was even in my arms. One year ago, Nathan suffered from a brain anteriovenous malformation bleed and CVA, which caused short-term memory loss. He is just 20 years old.
A young woman smiled at me once; she could not take the grin off of her face when I walked into the room. She was in her bed as usual, with her mother by her side feeding her dinner. Rebecca’s left side is weak, so I began massaging her left arm. This being the third time meeting Rebecca, I asked her if she remembered my name. “Oh, no she doesn’t remember stuff like that,” her mom said. Then, I heard Rebecca whisper, “Hi, Jasmine.” Her mother began crying tears of joy. Two days after giving birth to her second child, Rebecca suffered from a CVA that rendered her hemiplegic and with short-term memory loss.
I met both Nathan and Rebecca while volunteering at Ryan’s Reach, a group home for people with traumatic brain injuries. I work alongside other volunteers including speech therapists, occupational therapists, and physical therapists. With my experience as an EMT, the owners took me in with alacrity. I began volunteering at Ryan’s Reach because my boyfriend’s dad Troy also suffered from a traumatic brain injury. He fell 10 feet and landed on his head. The fall caused much adversity for both Troy and his family. His personality and motivation was altered, and this shifted the entire dynamic of the family. Witnessing the hardship and burden this toll took on the family drove me in the direction of patient care.
I began working as an EMT because I knew I wanted to pursue a career in the medical field. The EMS field has taught me a great deal in regards to fundamental healthcare. I have a strong desire to care for patients, but working as an EMT is not enough to fulfill that desire. Every day, I transport different patients and hand off care, not knowing what happens next and not being able to help each patient take the next step in improving his or her health. Volunteering at Ryan’s Reach gave me the opportunity to interact with and care for the same patients on a regular basis, but my scope of practice is limited. As a physician assistant, I will be able to take that next step with each and every patient and follow through to the end of each patient’s care.
In my time shadowing a physician assistant at an urgent care clinic and family practice, I witnessed the PA’s compassion, understanding, empathy, and desire to help – attributes that I respect and to which I ascribe. Whether it be suturing lacerations and ameliorating a patient’s stress level or reviewing treatment options for a follow-up back pain patient, the PA came to work every day with a passion in providing exceptional patient care.
Now when I visit, Nathan comes up to me and exclaims “Jasmine! It’s so nice to see you!” Providing Nathan and every patient with the compassionate and loving care they deserve is something I hold close to my heart. I have experienced countless moments with patients such as those with Nathan and Rebecca that have motivated me to pursue the PA profession. I am confident that my compassion to learn, my commitment to patient care, and my drive to succeed will lead me to success in the PA profession.
amber S says
This is my second draft of my personal statement. Please let me know if my paper is all over the place.
As I stepped onto the iron stool, I took one more look at my patient’s mother and I began thrusting into her son’s chest. I had his life in my hands and I could feel the direct penetration to his heart every time I pushed down; I knew his ribs had cracked. I was sweaty, tired, and uncertain her son would even gain his pulse back. Nevertheless, I continued pushing as firm and as swift as I could. I knew we couldn’t give up. Her face pleaded for us to continue. I looked at my team and I knew we all hoped for the possibility of the nurse feeling a faint pulsation against his fingers as the physician yelled pulse check. Unfortunately, after a long, exhausting, and disappointing 30 minutes he never regained his pulse. I watched as the physician asked his mother if we can stop CPR. Her body dropped to the cold hard floor. That is one of my most vivid memories since becoming an emergency room technician. He was the first patient I’ve ever lost. The ER has given me so many memorable experiences and lessons. Most importantly it has taught me as William Osler said medicine is the science of uncertainty and the art of probability. I’m reminded every day in this position why I choose medicine. I choose medicine because of probability. The probability that I can make a significant impact on someone’s life. The possibility that I could save the next patient.
My fondness for medicine and the physician assistant profession began in my teenage years when I started to grow a substantial amount of facial hair. I was a seventeen-year-old girl with a full beard and sideburns. I constantly felt embarrassed; I would spend hours in the mirror jabbing into my face trying to find ingrown hairs. My face was smothered with scars and tiny aching pimples. During this time my self-confidence plummeted and I suffered from depression issues. My mother eventually scheduled a visit to the endocrinologist and I was seen by a PA. As I conversed with the physician assistant I began to see how she was a vital asset to her team of medical practitioners. She diagnosed me with polycystic ovary syndrome and recommended that alongside medications, I also get laser surgery. After six months of treatment, my hirsutism slowed down. The PA had given me my normal life back and had boosted my self-confidence but most importantly, she had inspired me to become a physician assistant.
Upon enrollment into college, I had two goals in mind. My goals were to help young women in the community battle and overcome self-confidence issues and to pursue a career as a PA. In pursuit of these goals, I joined a sorority and other on-campus organizations that contributed to the progressive development of young girls into inspiring women. At volunteer activities, I spoke to women about my college experiences and my future career goals. While attending these empowerment meetings, I realized the question “what is a PA?” was asked too often. As a result, I began to spread awareness about this amazing profession. With the help of my sorority sisters, I began to conduct events dedicated to the PA profession on campus and surrounding areas. With commitment and dedication, I was able to educate young ladies on the academic and professional values of being a PA. The impact I made through this endeavor was a constant reminder of my encounter with my physician assistant and the boost she gave my self-confidence which heavily influenced my future aspirations of becoming a PA.
While an undergraduate student, my time management skills were substandard. I was working two part-time job positions and was an executive board member of my sorority. I was consumed by my engagement in multiple activities and it began to take a toll on my academic performance. However, I continued to strive and improved my grades. My grades are not a strong reflection of my academic ability, but I have since learned how to manage and utilize my time effectively. In the past year, I have worked hard to ensure my route into the PA profession isn’t altered. I finished my prerequisites, earned a B.S in biology, shadowed, became a medical scribe and I’m currently an emergency room technician. My determination and dedication to my goals have continued to drive my pursuit of becoming a well-rounded physician assistant and I want nothing more than to prove that I am worthy of your strongest consideration.
Rachel says
Through thirteen-year-old eyes, I watched with curiosity as my godmother, Emily grimaced in pain. Her husband wiped her head with a cool, wet towel and calmly told her to breathe. “Would anyone like to help?” asked the doctor as he pulled rubber gloves over his hands. To my surprise, he threw a blue gown over my head, snapped latex gloves on my hands, and told me to stand in front of the birth canal and prepare to deliver the baby. As instructed, I felt for the baby’s head, cusped it with my fingers, and gently pulled as Emily pushed. “It’s a boy,” I choked as tears poured down my face. In the illuminating glow of a mother’s face as she sees her baby for the first time, I was overcome with joy.
Witnessing the miracle of life and the amazing changes the human body can endure initially sparked my interest in medicine. While shadowing a PA at the local hospital in Gainesville, I was introduced to triaging and transitioning from diagnosis to treatment. This exposed me to the immense responsibilities of a healthcare provider, but my experience volunteering in the NICU was where I learned the necessity of humanity in a medical professional. The newborn lying before me was screeching in pain. I watched as the nurse injected Methadone into his IV and tried to calm him. “Would you like to hold him?” she asked as she lifted him out of the crib. I volunteered without hesitation, cuddling him close to my body. It was not long until his crying dissipated and his eyes slowly drifted shut. I was overcome with emotion, realizing the suffering baby just went through his first episode of drug withdrawal. This changed my perception of medicine and, ultimately, sent me on the path to becoming a physician assistant. I realized medicine involves more than technology and science; medicine is an art that blends physical treatment with compassion. As a future PA, I intend to embrace this art and treat patients with knowledge and empathy.
After a few years I decided I wanted to do more than make people comfortable. I wanted to be involved. My CPR certification and experience working in Dr. Kay Lowney’s Family Medicine and Express Care office subsequently prepared me for a position as a physical therapy technician. One day at work, a woman smiled at me as I called her from the lobby. Her name was Pam. She was slumped over in the chair, a walker sitting in front of her. I grew close to Pam as I coached her through each of her exercises. I listened to her talk about her pain and played a supportive role during her treatments. “I can’t do it,” Pam said each time I assigned an exercise. “I have faith you can,” I replied. She slowly gained confidence in her abilities as she successfully completed each exercise. As her muscles got stronger, the exercises became easier, and she grew more independent. We celebrated when I finally weaned her from the walker because her legs were stronger and balance improved. As Pam was leaving the clinic on her last day, without assistance, she confidently walked to me and embraced me in a hug as her eyes filled with tears. Without a word, she made perfect sense.
It was during this time working as a physical therapy technician that solidified my desire to become a physician assistant. Working in physical therapy was a fantastic experience, but I craved a wider scope of practice; I wanted to be involved in diagnosing patients and creating treatment plans, rather than merely following orders. I decided to shadow physician assistant at the local hospital. Watching Norman obtain a thorough history and physical exam on patients made me yearn for more knowledge. I admired the relationship he and his supervising surgeon had; they trusted each other and worked in tandem providing quality, evidence-based care to each of their patients. Frequently Norman and the surgeon would rattle off statistical data that correlated with their objective findings in order to come up with a plan of care for their patients. Working in this capacity made me value the wealth of knowledge Norman had and how well it complemented that of the physician he was working with.
Over the past year, I have accumulated more than 2000 hours of HCE through my job as a technician and a medical research coordinator while also taking and retaking post-baccalaureate classes to improve my overall GPA. There have been more than a few very long nights and days, but I have done my best to prove that I am able to handle a rigorous academic schedule. After the 12 hours of science-based courses I have taken over the past year, I have accumulated a post-baccalaureate GPA of 4.0.
Despite the birth that brought me to the hospital at 13 years old, the sounds, the residents, and the organized chaos of the halls have become an integral part of this new chapter in my life. As I move forward in my journey to become a PA, I never lose sight of my ultimate goal: to turn the suffering face of that NICU baby into the overwhelming happiness of a healed patient, like Pam. While I realize all patient encounters will not be this idyllic, I believe that with the right treatment and a provider’s compassion, sickness can often be defeated. In time and with hard work, it will be a privilege to possess the responsibility of caring for precious lives like those who have influenced this journey of mine to become a physician assistant.
Amanda says
This is my second year applying to PA school, and I would like help in addressing this issue in my essay. I would appreciate any help I could get, Thank you!
An athlete approached my athletic training room with chest pain after a weekend of competition. She stated her chest felt tight and she heard cracks and pops. This patient was familiar with this discomfort due to her previous episodes of spontaneous pneumothoraces. I immediately took the patient to the emergency room where she was diagnosed with atypical chest pain and was released the same day. The patient’s chest pain was increasing into the next morning. I called our team physician for advice, and we went back to the emergency room where she was released again. I called a pulmonologist for an appointment, and the doctor could see the her the following day. The pulmonologist listened to the patient’s lungs and immediately sent the patient for chest x-rays, which showed a pneumothorax. The patient was admitted to undergo a pleurodesis to repair the plural cavity. A few months later, the patient was cleared by the surgeon to begin her return to play protocol. I created a unique return to play protocol so this athlete felt confident in her return to Division I athletics. The protocol was successful and the patient was able to participate in the last competition of the season. This patient and I had a long journey, but she taught me patience and perseverance.
As an athletic trainer, I have a variety of patient experiences in the high school and collegiate settings. I have also continued to develop my skills in evaluating and treating sports related injuries and illnesses. I learned how to work efficiently with other medical personnel as a team to provide patients with the appropriate care. I have also gained experience with the special needs community assisting with their personal care needs. All of these experiences have been rewarding and I continue to learn from each new experience. However, my current position as an athletic trainer will always limit my medical practice. I have treated and diagnosed many athletic related injuries, but the handful that I must refer to a physician weigh on me. I want to be educated to understand the person as a whole, not just sports related injuries. Once I realized this limitation in athletic training, I began to research the career and shadow physician assistants.
During my last years as an undergraduate, I questioned my advisor about other career paths. He informed me about physician assistants, said my academics are excellent, and I would make a great candidate. After this discussion, I found opportunities to shadow with a physician assistant regularly. I saw the great team the physician assistant and physician made together along with their positive and upbeat attitudes they greeted their patients with. I saw my future self working in a setting like theirs. However, my Senior year of undergraduate was approaching, and I decided to finish my last year of undergraduate on the athletic training path so I could gain patient contact experiences towards my physician assistant school application. After receiving my bachelor’s in 2014, I accepted a scholarship to become a graduate assistant athletic trainer at the University of Texas at El Paso. I obtained a Master’s of Arts while working with the women’s volleyball team, and also graduated early. Since I graduated early, I was able to take undergraduate courses required for physician assistant school under my scholarship.
I am applying to physician assistant school for the second time. I took more upper-level division science courses to make my academic transcript more competitive, and I also was an student intern at the Orthopaedic Associates of Wisconsin. At this internship I was able to be part of a physician and physician assistant’s clinic. I took histories from the patients and updated the physician before he did his evaluation, assisted with the ethyl chloride spray during injections, and learned how to dictate patient notes. I also viewed numerous orthopedic surgeries, and got real-life anatomy lessons from the physician and physician assistant. This internship reassured my drive on becoming a physician assistant. I am so grateful that I had this opportunity and the physicians and physician assistants who have taught me things beyond what I knew as an athletic trainer. I was not discouraged when being denied from physician assistant school, and I knew I had to work hard at making my application stronger. Becoming a physician assistant will always be my goal, and I feel confident my application has improved since last year.
Physician assistant school will give me a strong background to assist a wide variety of individuals, and give them a better quality of care. Athletic training has given me an excellent health care foundation, but even with my experiences, I want more. I want to understand medicine for all people, not just the elite athlete. My passion to learn is strong, and I would be honored to gain a strong foundation in Physician Assistant Studies in 2018 to continue my medical career.
Kristen says
Hi there! I think I’m finally getting somewhere with this, any advice or critique is welcome!
Something bad happened. You had the green light, but the other driver was looking at their phone and smashed into your car at 45 mph. It’s all a blur, and your ears are ringing with the sounds of sirens. As you lay on the stretcher and the paramedics roll you under that neon red “EMERGENCY” sign, you suddenly realize how precious your time on earth is. Your eyes tear up as you remember that you were on your way to your son’s baseball game. You begin to beg for the only thing that matters; time. Time with your family, time to say the things you never said, time to reach for the dreams you never pursued. As that patient arm band is wrapped around your wrist and someone in a white coat puts a cold stethoscope to your chest, you reach for their arm “Please, help me! Someone call my wife.”
During my time working as an emergency department technician, I have cared for patients in this position hundreds of times. I have learned that time is the greatest gift one human being can give to another. Right now, the best I can do is give my time to my patients, providing comfort and helping their doctors and nurses fight for their life. As desperately as I want to heal their wounds and treat their illnesses, my scope of practice is limited to basic tasks. But as a physician assistant, I would have the skills and knowledge to help my patients live longer and survive to have even a few more precious hours.
I initially pursued my current role as an emergency department technician because I wanted to challenge myself, grow in my skills and knowledge, and do more for my patients than I could in my prior work as an EMT. I didn’t know at that time that my job would also open my eyes to the immense medical need in my community. The hospital I work for is in a low-income area with a high population, and many of our patients struggle with poverty and drug addiction. Even when we are fully staffed, we cannot possibly keep up with the volume of patients who check in every day. Thankfully, we have several physician assistants who have joined our team and whom I have the privilege to work alongside. Each shift, I observe and learn from these medical professionals as they work side-by-side with our doctors to care for our patients. I have been impressed by their knowledge and skill, and inspired by their compassion and work ethic. My interest in being a physician assistant was sparked when I first shadowed a PA while I was in high school, and it continued to smolder over the years as I explored different paths within medicine. Each time I worked with or shadowed a PA, I took the opportunity to ask them questions and attempted to learn more about their position. Now that I work with physician assistants every day, that smoldering interest has been fanned into a hungry flame.
It was actually one of my patients that hardened my resolve and made me absolutely determined to become a PA. She was a sweet 63-year-old lady who waited four hours in our lobby with shortness of breath. When I met her in the exam room, she was pale, diaphoretic, and obviously in great discomfort. As I completed her EKG and started drawing labs, I apologized for the long wait. She sighed and patted my hand, then looked up into my face and said “No honey, it isn’t your fault. It’s just the way things are these days. You don’t get to see a doctor anymore until you wind up in the ER half dead.” Unfortunately, she deteriorated rapidly and several hours later she went into cardiac arrest. I put my heart and soul into our efforts to resuscitate her, and tears rolled down my face as I remembered our conversation during round after round of chest compressions.
Her statement struck me then, and has echoed in my mind since that day. I can’t help but think that if we had more physician assistants, we could have provided earlier treatment and prevented her from reaching the point of arrest. She put into words what I have observed dozens of times every shift. Many people with chronic conditions cannot access a physician for a variety of reasons, and resort to checking into the ER when their illnesses progress to the point of being life threatening. It’s nothing unique to my area, it’s a health care issue that is widespread across the nation. People can’t afford to pay for doctor visits, or their physicians are over booked and the patients end up waiting months for an appointment. It’s a complex system that needs fixing. I don’t have all the answers, nor do I understand the subject in its entirety. But I know one solution is to have more providers that are accessible and affordable for those with few resources. I want to be a PA for the people in my community who are suffering because they have limited or no access to a healthcare provider. My greatest aspiration is to become a PA, and give them just a little more time.
Mina says
Hi there! This a rough draft, so any feedback would be great! Thank you so much!
As a child growing up in sunny California, I would spend my days playing outdoors. From the moment I got home from school, till the last light in the sky was barely visible. My mother would sometimes have to get my father out looking for me, but that itself was whole other game to me. I didn’t have a care in the world, the fact that we were a family of seven living in a 3 bedroom apartment meant nothing to me, after all it wasn’t to long ago that we were all separated by a war that threatened the lives of many in Ethiopia. To me, life in our cramped apartment was perfect.
As all things in life and balance, you can’t have perfection without imperfection. As refugees from Ethiopia, my family did not always have the ability to be together. My older brother and sister, myself, and my parents were the first to arrive in the United States, prior to that we lived at one of the largest refugee camps in Kenya. It was actually where I was born. In a semi makeshift hospital, my mother gave birth to me with no one but a midwife by her side. By the time my siblings had returned with my father, I had already taken my first few breaths of life. I remember my mother telling me about the kind women next to her who had shared her porridge to help her regain her strength. This wasn’t your everyday hospital that we experience here in America. If you wanted water or food you couldn’t buzz the nurse in to help you, you had to get up and do it yourself. My mom had to pull herself out of bed to wash the bloody sheets she had just delivered on, to have something to wrap me in. It was one of the many displays of strength and sacrifices she showed me.
Swahili became my first language I learned during our time at the camps, my entire family spoke it to be able to better communicate with out Kenya neighbors. It wasn’t until we arrived in California I learned English and when my other siblings arrived from Ethiopia, I learned Oromo. Prior to that, I couldn’t communicate with them for the first few months due to the language barrier. I had learned Swahili from being in the refugee camps and they, being raised in Ethiopia by my grandmother, had learned our native tongue Oromo. Life was always a struggle for us, whether it was emotionally or financially, but we managed to get through it because we always had each other. Like the role of a Physician Assistant, we understood that to get through an obstacles in life we required all members of the team. I learned at a very young age, that there was no such thing as a successful person without the supporting team behind them.
Adjusting to a new culture was hard, I quickly had to learn that telling kids that Santa Clause didn’t exist wasn’t the best thing to do to try and make new friends. I eventually did make friends and we used to spend our days letting our imagination run wild. My favorite game was “doctors”. I used to think that I would cure my dad of his seziures, which we later found out was due to an arteriovenous malformation, and save my little sister who passed away due to a heart condition at birth. I used to bandage us our scarred little knees with careful concentration, and be amazed at the way our cuts and scrapes used to heal itself. I continued through school with hopes of working in the medical field but it always wasn’t easy with no one there to guide me. Both my mom and dad had elementary school knowledge, so school and life in general in America was always trial and error. Though I was a pre-med major in the first year of my college experience, I changed majors to criminal justice. I felt as though my dreams of working in the health field were just that, “dreams”, and I felt like an imposter next to classmates. I did what I hope I will never do again, feel as though I wasn’t good enough! One pre-requistes at a time, my insecurities of feeling as an imposter went away until I realized I was the only barrier in my lifelong passion. Even though I did enjoy the criminal justice field, in which I hoped to ultimately become a dectective since mystery’s always intrigued me, it wasn’t until my younger sister went through heart failure shortly after giving birth, due to systematic lupus erythematous, did my passion of working in the health field fire up again. During our 3 month stay in the cardiac unit, I was reintroduced to the medical career, Physician Assistant.
The physician assistant was an amazing person who used to break down the confusing medical terms of what was happening to my sister. I remember the care, and time she took with my family and I to try and help us cope with what was happening. The more time I spent learning from her, the more I came to realize this is what I was suppose to be doing! Not putting criminal mysterious together but instead piecing together medical mysterious to come up with a diagnosis, and helping those that, in that moment can’t help themselves. When I started to work as a medical assistant for a refugee clinic, it became more relevant and clear to me that this was my calling. Life has a way of making a full circle. With every patient that came in, I could see myself and my family in them. The frustration written in the lines of their faces, the struggles apparent in their eyes, but the hopes and relief in words they spoke when they knew they could communicate with us. Language is the barrier that I hope to overcome in the underserved community, I’ve experienced the relief our patients feel to come in and be able to tell us what is going on in their native tongue. Through our diversity in our clinic, we are able to help our patients feel comfortable and most importantly, heard. I hope to be able to continue that no matter where I end up, as diversity accomplishes the goal of deeper understanding, respect, and acceptance.
Shadowing and working in an underserved refugee community has helped me realized that I have so much to give. My passion for putting together mystery’s, my ability to relate and speak different languages, and my passion for serving the underserved community makes me feel that being a physician assistant is where my calling is. I remember one of our patients getting interviewed by a local professor who taught journalism at a nearby University. Her story of how she become a refugee included losing one of her eyes, losing her daughter and her son in law to a liver disease, and ultimately being the sole caretaker of her granddaughter. They asked her if she had developed any friends in Colorado. Her response? “ Yes!” She continued naming people at the clinic. It was deeply touching and fulfilling to know that you can help someone not only medically, but also on a level of deeper understanding. I hope I can continue being that friendly face to not only Hafsa, but to all of the Hafsa’s of the world. The underserved community deserved to have services available to them, and I hope I am one of many this cycle to fill in the gaps of society.
Anna says
This is my very first draft of my personal statement so any feedback is much appreciated. Where I’m going in the right direction and where I’m not. I’m also over the character limit a bit, so things to cut back on would also really help. Thanks so much for any help!
“Smile because life is a beautiful thing and there’s so much to smile about.” The words are written in pencil on plain printer paper and hang on my bathroom mirror. Under the quote is a big sunburst flower drawn in yellow crayon. The drawing was given to me by a patient of mine when working a shift in the emergency department, and every morning I read her words, hoping she’s out there smiling with me. Her name was Sarah and she was only 16 years old. Sarah was in the emergency room for a third suicide attempt. She was my patient, and as her NA, I was going to do all I could to get her smiling again. I worked with Sarah throughout that shift, practicing relaxation drills and coping mechanisms during times when her anxiety seemed to close in around her. Giving me the biggest hug at the end of my shift that day, she handed me the paper with the quote and flower drawing. It wasn’t until I had already left the hospital that I flipped it over and found a handwritten note. “Thanks so much for hanging out with me. It was so nice to know someone truly cares. I wish you nothing but the best.” Sarah was wishing me the best and I hadn’t even been able to tell her if I would be back next shift. Despite doing all I could for my patient, I left wishing there was more I could do, as often happens with many of the people I care for at the hospital. As a physician assistant, I hope to do more and work with my patients throughout their journeys.
I discovered my passion for caring for others very early in life. At age 6, my cousin was born without a fully formed esophagus, which rendered him unable to eat. With my grandmother often watching over many grandchildren at a time, the responsibility of caring for and feeding Jack frequently fell to me. Jack would drink from a bottle, which emptied from a surgically created hole in his neck, while he was simultaneously fed through a feeding tube. The process was complicated and messy, but it ensured Jack learned how to eat and learned the connection between eating and satiation. At such a young age, caring for Jack really excited me and ignited my passion for health and helping others. From then on, my yearning for knowledge only continued to grow. I was taking medical science courses in school, and by the time I began shadowing a PA in high school, I knew this was the field I wanted to pursue. Working at a cardiology clinic that was also connected to a major hospital, I was able to observe Mrs. Riddle in both outpatient and inpatient settings. She created relationships with her patients and assured them about their care while she also effectively maked diagnostic decisions. I had the chance to witness the stenting in a catheterization lab of a patient experiencing a myocardial infarction. The simultaneous care and compassion Mrs. Riddle showed for her patient while also making sure the correct decisions about her treatment were being made truly opened my eyes to a career as a physician assistant and solidified my decision to pursue this field.
Throughout my undergraduate and post-baccalaureate career, I have continued to enthusiastically pursue opportunities that would bring me closer to my goal of becoming a PA. Working as a CNA at a large hospital, I have cared for a wide variety of patients. Whether it’s Sarah in the ED for attempted suicide, a 50-year old man in the Trauma ICU with multiple gunshot wounds, an 86-year old in the psychiatric unit with severe dementia who just wants to understand where his wife is, or a 4-month old infant in the children’s hospital with a congenital heart defect, they are my patients and they have my complete attention from the very start of my shifts until I leave that night. Though the days can be long and tiring, I wouldn’t give my patients up for the world. The interactions and relationships I build with each person are so important to me, so that they know am there for them during their process of healing. I celebrate even the smallest steps of progress with my patients, whether it’s with Sarah, who when anxious, used deep breathing to calm down instead of scratching at her wrists, or my patient on the Intermediate Coronary Care Unit who took his first steps with me after his heart surgery. Their successes make the work worth it, and though I get to experience their small steps forward, I yearn to be able to cheer on my patients along their entire journeys.
Every shift and experience drives me towards my goal of becoming a PA and making a difference in my patients’ lives. To make things a little better for them, to keep each patient smiling, makes it all the more worthwhile for me in return. Though I attempt to do all I can for my patients, like Sarah, and to make their illnesses a little more bearable, I strive for the opportunity to do more for those I care for. Instead of leaving work not knowing if I will see them again or if they will be okay, I want to leave knowing I’ve started my patients down a path of healing and excited to see their progress the following shift. I want my patients to know someone is there caring for them through the entire experience and reminding them, just as Sarah reminds me, that “life is a beautiful thing.”