Originally Posted by indiophil
I thought the programs were different. They have different admission requirements for each program, and they say RNs have the option of getting certified as PAs. Do you know anyone whos gotten both? I'm just really curious how that works out, if they end up practicing as one all the time despite having the other certification.
UC Davis doesn't have a nursing program (they are starting one in 2009). Previously you could get an NP license in California by completing coursework and having a master's degree. Essentially the NP program at Davis and Stanford were designed as PA programs that fulfilled all the requirements for an FNP. In the 70's and 80's there were supervisory requirements that made this advantageous in their stated mission of providing rural health. With the changes in regulation this was no longer possible. The Stanford announcement about the discontinuation of their FNP program lays it out pretty well:
http://pcap.stanford.edu/program/FNP...n%20Change.pdf
From the Davis site:
"The opportunity to enroll in the FNP MSN Track curriculum is available to licensed registered nurses who possess a bachelor’s degree. Eligible applicants must apply specifically to the FNP Master's Track of the UC Davis FNP/PA Program. Students completing the Master’s Track of this program may elect to receive one or two certificates of completion from the UC Davis School of Medicine Department of Family and Community Medicine (one for the FNP Program and one for the PA Program) and a Master of Science degree in Nursing from CSUS."
Basically if you are an RN with a Bachelors degree you have two choices. You can apply to the PA program or you can apply to the FNP Masters track of the FNP/PA program. If you are in the FNP program you take additional classes at CSUS for the MSN. You are given a certificate that will allow you to sit for the PANCE and once you get your MSN you can sit for the FNP exam. Prior to this my understanding is that most sat for both and used whichever certification was more advantageous. If you read the Stanford letter many students who moved out of state used the PA-C instead of the FNP. The only Davis or Stanford grad that I have encountered were working as PAs.
With the new set up people will probably be PANCE eligible before they complete the MSN. This is all relatively new so I'm not sure if anyone knows how it will play out. It will all probably go away in the next few years with the DNP. It may go away sooner if nursing school starts their own FNP program.
David Carpenter, PA-C