Program Overview

Program Overview

ATM campus

The Hawaiʻi Pacific University Physician Assistant (PA) Program is a rigorous, full-time 24-month program of study culminating in the Master of Medical Science (MMS) degree. The didactic phase of study is hybrid, with a combination of remote and in-person learning. Remote instruction includes daily synchronous and asynchronous engagement with experienced faculty with a wide range of scientific and clinical expertise. In-person sessions involve periodic travel to Hawai‘i for 1-2 week-long immersions on HPU’s downtown Honolulu campus to allow hands-on acquisition of physical examination and clinical skills, as well as for assessment of competency in preparation for clinical rotations. During the clinical phase of study, students complete intensive, hands-on supervised clinical practice experiences across seven required disciplines (emergency medicine, surgical medicine, internal medicine, behavioral medicine, family medicine, women’s health, pediatric medicine) as well as in an elective clinical rotation specialty. Students’ final on-campus immersion consists of a comprehensive summative evaluation prior to graduation from the program, along with preparation for transition to professional practice as a physician assistant. 

The developing HPU PA Program anticipates matriculating the first cohort of students in January 2025 

 

The Hawai'i Pacific University (HPU) Master of Medical Science - Physician Assistant (MMS-PA) Program was granted approval by the WASC Senior College and University Commission on 8/25/2021. HPU has applied for Accreditation - Provisional from the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant (ARC-PA). The HPU MMS-PA program anticipates matriculating its first class in January 2025, pending achieving Accreditation - Provisional status at the June 2024 ARC-PA meeting. Accreditation - Provisional is an accreditation status granted when the plans and resource allocation, if fully implemented as planned, of a proposed program that has not yet enrolled students appear to demonstrate the program’s ability to meet the ARC-PA Standards or when a program holding accreditation-provisional status appears to demonstrate continued progress in complying with the Standards as it prepares for the graduation of the first class (cohort) of students. The program will not commence in the event that Accreditation-Provisional status from ARC-PA is not received.

Mission  

Educate the next generation of physician assistants by engaging students who are dedicated to advancing health equity and delivering an innovative educational model that reduces barriers for PA learners. We are committed to preparing students to deliver high quality patient-centered care to the Hawaiian island communities and medically underserved populations across the nation.  

 

Vision 

To cultivate a student-centered culture of inclusion and excellence that develops graduates who serve their communities and improve healthcare delivery.   

 

Core Values 

The HPU MMS-PA Program embraces the Hawaiian values of aloha, pono, kuleana, mālama, and lōkahi. 

  • Aloha - the essence of being and acting with love, kindness, grace, unity, humility, and a mutual understanding of respect. 
  • Pono - behavior and practice of integrity; righteous, honest and moral, and an energy of necessity. 
  • Kuleana - responsibility and rights, concern for all interests, property, and people. 
  • Mālama - to take care of, tend, attend, care for, preserve, protect. 
  • Lōkahi - unity, agreement, harmony, inclusivity, united as one.

Program Goals 

  1. Educate learners with the knowledge, skills, and professional attributes for entry-level practice as physician assistants.    
  2. Recruit, matriculate, and graduate a diverse student body committed to increasing the healthcare provider workforce in Hawaiʻi and in underserved areas. 
  3. Foster a student-centered learning environment that values innovative educational experiences, learner inclusivity, and lifelong learning. 
  4. Prepare graduates to advocate for underserved populations, promote health equity, and to address priority health concerns in their communities. 
  5. Core Program faculty demonstrate a commitment to excellence and professionalism through life-long learning, service, and scholarship. 

Year 1: Didactic Phase 

Semester 1 - Spring 

Semester 2 - Summer 

Semester 3 - Fall 

Anatomy I 

Anatomy II 

Anatomy III 

Basic Science I 

Basic Science II 

Basic Science III 

Pharmacology & Pharmacotherapeutics I 

Pharmacology & Pharmacotherapeutics II 

Pharmacology & Pharmacotherapeutics III 

Clinical Medicine I 

Clinical Medicine II 

Clinical Medicine III 

Patient Assessment I 

Patient Assessment II 

Patient Assessment III 

Professional Development I 

Professional Development II 

Patient & Society 

Biopsych/Prev Med I 

 

Biopsych/Prev Med II 

Immersion I 

Immersion II 

 

 

Year 2: Clinical Phase 

Semester 1 - Spring 

Semester 2 - Summer 

Semester 3 - Fall 

Preparation for Clinical Phase 

Clinical Phase Seminar 

Transition to Practice 

 

Rotation 1 

Rotation 2 

Rotation 3 

Rotation 4 

Rotation 5 

Rotation 6 

Rotation 7 

Rotation 8 

Immersion III 

 

Immersion IV/Summative Evaluation 

 

Full course descriptions can be found on Hawai‘i Pacific University's ONLINE Course Catalog

YEAR ONE

Spring 1 

CREDIT HOURS 

PA 6000 Biopsychosocial & Preventive Medicine I 

2 

PA 6100 Anatomy I 

2 

PA 6200 Basic Science I 

2 

PA 6300 Pharmacology & Pharmacotherapeutics I 

3 

PA 6400 Clinical Medicine I 

6 

PA 6500 Patient Assessment I 

3 

PA 6600 Professional Development  

2 

 Total Semester Credits:

20 

 

SUMMER 1

CREDIT HOURS

PA 6120 Anatomy II 

4 

PA 6220 Basic Science II 

2 

 PA 6320 Pharmacology &  
Pharmacotherapeutics II 

3 

PA 6420 Clinical Medicine II 

6 

PA 6520 Patient Assessment II 

3 

PA 6620 Professional Development II 

2 

 Total Semester Credits:

20 

 

Fall 1 

CREDIT HOURS 

PA 6030 Biopsychosocial & Preventive Medicine II 

2 

PA 6130 Anatomy III 

2 

PA 6230 Basic Science III 

2 

PA 6330 Pharmacology &  
Pharmacotherapeutics III 

3 

PA 6430 Clinical Medicine III 

6 

PA 6530 Patient Assessment III 

3 

PA 6700 Patient & Society 

2 

 Total Semester Credits:

20 

Total Credits - Year One 

60 

 

 

YEAR 2

 CREDIT HOURS

PA 7000 Preparation for Clinical Phase 

5 

PA 7350 Clinical Phase Seminar 

2 

PA 7900 Transition to Practice 

2 

PA 7100 Emergency Medicine Rotation 

5 

PA 7200 Surgical Medicine Rotation 

5 

PA 7300 Internal Medicine Rotation 

5 

PA 7400 Behavioral Medicine Rotation 

5 

PA 7500 Family Medicine Rotation 

5 

PA 7600 Women’s Health Rotation 

5 

PA 7700 Pediatric Medicine Rotation 

5 

PA 7800 Elective Rotation 

5 

Total Credits – Year Two 

49 

Total Program Credits for MMS-PA degree 

109 

Supervised clinical instruction is vital to the development and mastery of PA graduate competencies. The clinical phase of the program is 11 months long and exposes students to medical care across the lifespan, including infants, children, adolescents, adults, and the elderly.  The clinical phase of the HPU MMS-PA Program includes eight clinical rotations or Supervised Clinical Practice Experiences (SCPEs). Supervised clinical care experiences will occur in the outpatient and inpatient settings, the emergency department, and the operating room.  

Students will rotate through eight 5-week SCPEs across seven required disciplines and have the opportunity for one elective rotation. Required core rotations include:  

  • Emergency Medicine 
  • Surgical Medicine 
  • Internal Medicine (inpatient) 
  • Behavioral Medicine
  • Family Medicine 
  • Women’s Health 
  • Pediatric Medicine 

Clinical instructional faculty (preceptors) for SCPE rotations are primarily physicians (MD or DO) who are specialty board certified in their area of instruction and hold a valid license to practice at the clinical site; or NCCPA certified physician assistants (PAs) who hold a valid license to practice at the clinical site.  

The HPU PA program has clinical affiliations with a variety of clinical sites in Hawaiʻi, California, and throughout the US. Rotations in the required curriculum may be scheduled at some distance from campus and the students' current residence. This is necessary to provide a range of diverse learning experiences and ensure availability and quality of clinical rotation sites. Students are responsible for providing their own housing and transportation to and from the clinical sites and campus. Housing and travel costs for the clinical year vary widely depending on the site and location. 

Prospective and enrolled students of the HPU PA Program are NOT required to provide or solicit clinical sites or preceptors. Students should not be involved with site or preceptor recruitment activities. If a student has a personal or professional connection to a potential clinical site or a preference for a potential clinical site, they should provide this information to the Director of Clinical Education. The DCE will decide if the potential clinical site/preceptor is appropriate and will contact the clinical site directly for further inquiry.  

Course Number and Title: PA 7100 Emergency Medicine Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: This supervised clinical practice experience (SCPE) provides students with an opportunity to actively engage in applying the knowledge and skills gained during the didactic phase of their education to evaluate and treat patients who may present with acute, urgent, or emergent complaints in an emergency medicine setting.   

 

Course Number and Title: PA 7200 Surgical Medicine Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: This supervised clinical practice experience (SCPE) provides students with an opportunity to actively engage in applying the knowledge and skills gained during the didactic phase of their education to evaluate and treat pre-operative, intra-operative, and post-operative patients in a surgical setting. This experience will foster the student’s ability to differentiate between surgical (including acute versus elective) versus nonsurgical presentations. 

 

Course Number and Title: PA 7300 Internal Medicine Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: This supervised clinical practice experience (SCPE) provides students with an opportunity to actively engage in applying the knowledge and skills gained during the didactic phase of their education to evaluate and treat patients in a hospital-based, inpatient setting. Students will hone critical thinking and clinical reasoning skills through evidence-based approaches to the evaluation and management of internal medicine patients who may present with acute, chronic, emergent, and/or life-threatening conditions.  

 

Course Number and Title: PA 7400 Behavioral Medicine Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: This supervised clinical practice experience (SCPE) provides students with an opportunity to actively engage in applying the knowledge and skills gained during the didactic phase of their education to evaluate and treat patients in behavioral and mental health settings. In honing knowledge of behavioral and mental health, students will develop clinical reasoning and critical thinking to differentiate behavioral health needs and appropriate levels of care.  

 

Course Number and Title: PA 7500 Family Medicine Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: This supervised clinical practice experience (SCPE) provides students with an opportunity to actively engage in applying the knowledge and skills gained during the didactic phase of their education to evaluate and treat patients while emphasizing patient-centered care. This rotation may include exposure to the team practice concept of healthcare via the integration of community services, preventative medicine, patient education, and medical diagnosis and treatment of both acute and chronic conditions for patients.   

 

Course Number and Title: PA 7600 Women’s Health Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: This supervised clinical practice experience (SCPE) provides students with an opportunity to actively engage in applying the knowledge and skills gained during the didactic phase of their education to evaluate and treat patients in women’s health including common gynecologic conditions, family planning and prenatal care. This may include managing normal pregnancy versus acute, urgent, or emergent pregnancy-related problems as well as post-partum care.  

 

Course Number and Title: PA 7700 Pediatric Medicine Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: This supervised clinical practice experience (SCPE) provides students with an opportunity to actively engage in applying the knowledge and skills gained during the didactic phase of their education to evaluate and treat patients in pediatric medicine. Pediatric medicine experiences include well visits that allow students to hone interpersonal skills with birth through adolescent-aged patients and their families or caregivers. Pediatric medicine experiences emphasize preventive pediatric health care as well as common childhood illnesses and psychosocial concerns. 

 

Course Number and Title: PA 7800 Elective Rotation 

Course Credits: 5  

Course Description: Provides PA students in the clinical phase of the PA program experiential learning in one of the core discipline rotations or an elective specialty. This rotation will be coordinated with the program to ensure it meets program goals and continues to cultivate the knowledge and skills to achieve program learning outcomes. Students will work under the supervision of a Program-determined licensed healthcare professional and/or their designee(s). Each PA student must successfully complete one elective clinical rotation prior to graduation.  

 

 

 

Spring Term 2025
HPU Calendar Start Date End Date
Orientation  January 2 January 3
Week 1 January 6 January 10
Week 2 January 13 January 17
Week 3* January 20 [MLK Day] January 24

Week 4**

On campus immersion

January 27 January 31
Week 5 February 3 February 7
Week 6 February 10 February 14
Week 7 February 17 February 21
Week 8 February 24 February 28 
HPU Spring Break

March 3

(PA Program will NOT break at this time, PA Program break is at the end of the semester)

March 7
Week 9 March 10 March 14
Week 10 March 17 March 21
Week 11* March 24 [Prince Kūhiō Day Observed 3/26] March 28
Week 12 March 31 April 4
Week 13 April 7 April 11
Week 14 April 14 April 18
Week 15 April 21 April 25
Week 16/BREAK April 28 May 2

* Denotes official University holiday; students on clinical rotations follow the schedule of their clinical site and NOT University holidays. 

** Immersion weeks assume up to 6 days of activities/week (Monday through Saturday); detailed immersion schedules will be published and available on Blackboard.

 

Summer Term 2025
HPU Calendar Start Date End Date
Week 1 May 5 May 9
Week 2 May 12 May 16
Week 3 May 19 May 23
Week 4* May 26 [Memorial Day] May 30
Week 5 June 2 June 6
Week 6* June 9 [Kamehameha Day Observed June 11] June 13
Week 7* June 16 [Juneteenth Observed June 19] June 20
Week 8 June 23 June 27
Week 9* June 30 [Independence Day Observed July 4] July 4

Week 10**

On campus immersion

July 7 July 11

Week 11**

On campus immersion

July 14 July 18
Week 12 July 21 July 25
Week 13 July 28 August 1
Week 14 August 4 August 8
Week 15 August 11 August 15
Week 16 August 18 August 22

* Denotes official University holiday; students on clinical rotations follow the schedule of their clinical site and NOT University holidays. 

** Immersion weeks assume up to 6 days of activities/week (Monday through Saturday); detailed immersion schedules will be published and available on Blackboard.

 

FALL 2025
HPU Calendar Start Date End Date
Week 1 August 25 August 29
Week 2* September 1 [Labor Day] September 5
Week 3 September 8 September 12
Week 4 September 15 September 19
Week 5 September 22 September 26
Week 6 September 29 October 3
Week 7 October 6 October 10
Week 8 October 13 October 17
Week 9 October 20 October 24
Week 10 October 27 October 31
Week 11 November 3 November 7
Week 12* November 10 [Veteran's Day Observed November 11] November 14
Week 13 November 17 November 21
Week 14* November 24 [Thanksgiving Observed November 27-28] November 28
Week 15 December 1 December 5
Week 16 December 8 December 12
BREAK December 13 December 31

* Denotes official University holiday; students on clinical rotations follow the schedule of their clinical site and NOT University holidays. 

** Immersion weeks assume up to 6 days of activities/week (Monday through Saturday); detailed immersion schedules will be published and available on Blackboard.

 

SPRING 2026
HPU Calendar Start Date End Date
BREAK January 1 January 11
Week 1 January 12 January 16
Week 2* January 19 [MLK Day] January 23

Week 3**

On campus immersion

January 26 February 1

Week 4**

On campus immersion

February 2 February 8
Week 5 February 9 February 15
Week 6 February 16 February 22
Week 7 February 23 March 1
Week 8 March 2 March 8
HPU Spring Break March 9 March 15
Week 9 March 16 March 22
Week 10 March 23 March 29
Week 11 March 30 April 5
Week 12 April 6 April 12
Week 13 April 13 April 19
Week 14 April 20 April 26
Week 15 April 27 May 3
BREAK May 4 May 10

Clinical Rotation 1: February 9 to March 15 (Week 5 - HPU Spring Break)
Call Back Week (Online): Week 9
Clinical Rotation 2: March 23 to April 26 (Week 10 - Week 14)
Call Back Week (Online): Week 15

* Denotes official University holiday; students on clinical rotations follow the schedule of their clinical site and NOT University holidays. 

** Immersion weeks assume up to 6 days of activities/week (Monday through Saturday); detailed immersion schedules will be published and available on Blackboard.

 

SUMMER 2026
HPU Calendar Start Date End Date
Week 1 May 11 May 17
Week 2 May 18 May 24
Week 3 May 25 May 30
Week 4 June 1 June 7
Week 5 June 8 June 14
Week 6 June 15 June 21
Week 7 June 22 June 28
Week 8 June 29 July 5
Week 9 July 6 July 12
Week 10 July 13 July 19
Week 11 July 20 July 26
Week 12 July 27 August 2
Week 13 August 3 August 9
Week 14 August 10 August 16
Week 15 August 17 August 23
Week 16 August 24 August 30

Clinical Rotation 3: May 11 to June 14 (Week 1 - Week 5)
Clinical Rotation 4: June 15 to July 19 (Week 6 - Week 10)
Clinical Rotation 5: July 20 to August 23 (Week 11 - Week 15)
Call Back Week (Online): Week 16
* Denotes official University holiday; students on clinical rotations follow the schedule of their clinical site and NOT University holidays. 
** Immersion weeks assume up to 6 days of activities/week (Monday through Saturday); detailed immersion schedules will be published and available on Blackboard. 

 

FALL 2026
HPU Calendar Start Date End Date
Week 1 August 31 September 6
Week 2 September 7 September 13
Week 3 September 14 September 20
Week 4 September 21 September 27
Week 5 September 28 October 4
Week 6 October 5 October 11
Week 7 October 12 October 18
Week 8 October 19 October 25
Week 9 October 26 November 1
Week 10 November 2 November 8

Week 11**

On campus immersion

November 9 November 13
Week 12 November 16 November 22
Week 13 November 23 November 29
Week 14 November 30 December 6
Week 15  December 7 December 13
Week 16 December 14 December 20
Completion Activities

EOR, Program Completion:

TBD between Dec 17 - 23

Commencement Ceremony:

Saturday, December 19

Clinical Rotation 6: August 31 to October 4 (Week 1 - Week 5)
Clinical Rotation 7: October 5 to November 8 (Week 6 - Week 10)
End Of Rotation (EOR) Exam: November 9
Summative Evaluation: November 9 - 13 (Week 11, On campus immersion)
Clinical Rotation 8: November 16 to December 20  (Week 12 - Week 16)
* Denotes official University holiday; students on clinical rotations follow the schedule of their clinical site and NOT University holidays. 
** Immersion weeks assume up to 6 days of activities/week (Monday through Saturday); detailed immersion schedules will be published and available on Blackboard. 

The Hawai'i Pacific University Physician Assistant Program will post its NCCA PANCE Exam Performance Summary Report Last 5 Years annually starting Spring 2027.

The Hawai'i Pacific University Physician Assistant Program will post its most current annual student attrition information as required by ARC-PA no later than April 1st annually.

 

 Class of 2026 Class of 2027 Class of 2028
Maximum entering class size (as approved by ARC-PA) # # #
Entering class size # # #
Attrition rate (# of students who attrited from cohort divided by the entering class size) # # #
Graduation rate (#of cohort graduates divided by entering class size) # # #

PAs are a vital part of the healthcare delivery system in the United States. According to the National Commission on Certification for Physician Assistants (NCCPA), there are more than 168,000 board certified PAs in the U.S. who treat 10.4 million patients per week. One PA treats over 70 patients each week, often providing healthcare where a patient would normally not be able to get timely access to care. PAs are found in every medical specialty and practice setting. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, employment of PAs is projected to grow 28% from 2021 to 2031. In the state of Hawaiʻi PA practice has grown by 42.3% between 2018-2022. 

 

Upon graduating from a nationally accredited PA school (PA programs are accredited by the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant), PAs must obtain national board certification and state licensure. While practice laws vary by state, in general, PAs are licensed to perform diagnostic, therapeutic, preventive and health maintenance services in any setting where physicians provide care and can fill gaps in care as part of physician-PA collaborative practice. 

 

Additional information about PA education and PA practice can be found at: 

The American Academy of PAs (AAPA) What is a PA? 

The Physician Assistant Education Association (PAEA) Advisors and Pre-PA Students page 

The National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA) PAs Do That