Includes Patricia (Pat) M. Dieter's records documenting her professional career as a physician assistant including her time as the Physician Assistant (PA) Program Director (2003-2012) and the Division Chief of the PA Division (2013-2021). The materials document the PA profession and her work in these roles and include PA Program curriculum; photographic materials and a photo album; audiovisual materials; graduation programs; PA admissions slides; PA Program 50th Anniversary materials; PA program administrative materials including moving the program to its 800 S. Duke Street location, conversion of the program to the MHS degree, survey data, faculty retreat materials, division notebooks, and accreditation; as well as correspondence, reports, publications, and historical information about the program. Materials date from 1964 to 2021.
Contains the administrative records of the Physician Assistant (PA) Program at the Duke University Medical Center, as well as the papers of the following program administrators: D. Robert Howard, John James McQueary, Reginald D. Carter, and Patricia (Pat) M. Dieter. Types of materials include correspondence, minutes, handbooks, grant materials, certificates, newsletters, budgets, reports, proceedings, subject files, publications, awards, photographs, audiotapes, memorabilia, clippings, announcements, memoranda, reprints, seminar flyers, original comic strip artwork, plaques, scrapbooks, oral history tapes and transcripts, computer disks, magnetic cards, videos, slides, and digital files. Major organizations include the American Academy of Physician Assistants, the Academy of Physician Assistant Programs, the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants, the North Carolina Academy of Physician Assistants, and the Eugene A. Stead Society. Major subjects include establishment of the PA profession, PA programs, PA history, admissions processes, curricula, PA education, accreditation standards, students, PA utilization and employment, certification of PAs, public and professional acceptance of PAs, third party Medicare Reimbursement, continuing medical education, area health education centers, and PA legislation. Materials range in date from 1964 to 2021.
Contains materials from budget notebooks related to the operation of the PA program, as well as grant administration and justification. Also contains bound and unbound materials related to National Institutes of Health training grants, Veterans Administration Congressional grant, and various other training grants, as well as materials pertaining to the Integrated Academic Information Management Systems (IAIMS) grant. Types of materials include grant proposals and applications, curriculum vitas, summaries and reports, correspondence, and committee meeting materials.
Contains administrative files and handbooks, budget materials, correspondence, IBM magnetic cards, brochures, memorandum, curriculum vitas, and subject files pertaining to the administration of the Physician Assistant (PA) program. Major subjects include development of the PA profession, PA education and curriculum development, accreditation, salary evaluation, admissions process, statistics and demographics, program goals and objectives, minority recruitment and retention, funding, and grants. Oversized posters and an exhibit panel have been separated from this series. Materials date from 1964 to 2001.
Includes Patricia (Pat) M. Dieter's administrative records documenting her professional career as a physician assistant including her time as the Physician Assistant (PA) Program Director (2003-2012) and the Division Chief of the PA Division (2013-2021). Materials date from 1964 to 2021.