Marquette Physician Assistant program expanding to address provider shortage

March 22, 2018


Increased enrollment, new 44,000-square-foot building will help in-demand program grow

PA building rendering

MILWAUKEE — To help address the provider gap in primary care, ÃÛÌÒÓ°Ïñ will begin construction this spring on a new facility for its nationally ranked Physician Assistant Studies program, President Michael R. Lovell announced today. The building, which will be located on land the university owns on the northwest corner of West Clybourn Street and North 17th Street, will facilitate program growth to position it as one of the largest such programs in the region and nation.

According to the Wisconsin Department of Health Services, the state currently has several Primary Care Health Professional Shortage Areas, including one near Marquette's campus. Data from WDHS shows that 10 counties need an additional three to 10 primary care providers to close existing shortages.

Demand for enrollment in Marquette's PA program has grown, putting it in a unique position to address provider shortages. The program received nearly 1,400 applications for the available seats in the current cycle, and interest continues to grow by approximately 10 percent per year.

"Rooted in our Catholic, Jesuit tradition, Marquette was founded on a mission of access, and access to excellent health care is an important application of that ideal. We have a unique opportunity to make greater a world-class program that is addressing a real local, regional and national need for primary care providers," Lovell said. "Through this expansion, we will graduate even more Jesuit-trained health care leaders each year, many of whom will go on to work in family and emergency medicine, or in underserved areas in Wisconsin and beyond."

Marquette has made an initial investment to begin construction on the PA facility, and the university invites additional support from partners and donors who see an opportunity to ensure a strong Jesuit-trained pipeline of physician assistants. The 44,000-square-foot, $18.5 million building is expected to open in summer 2019; a groundbreaking date will be set for later this spring.

"We are excited about a new facility for our physician assistant studies program, one of the university's most outstanding academic enterprises," said Dr. William E. Cullinan, professor and dean of the College of Health Sciences, which houses the program. "This state-of-the-art facility will allow us to expand our class to help meet the growing demand for these advanced practice providers, while simultaneously affording increased opportunities for inter-professional education with related health care disciplines."

The facility will serve as an educational hub for the program's existing and future clinical partners, according to Paul Coogan, M.D., the program's medical director and president of Aurora Health Care's Emergency Medicine Division. Currently, the PA program works with clinical partners at more than 400 sites. Partners include Aurora Health Care; Froedtert and the Medical College of Wisconsin; Children's Hospital of Wisconsin; ProHealth Care; Ascension; Prevea Health; and others.

"Our country has an aging population and a projected physician shortage of more than 100,000 primary care doctors by 2025," Coogan said. "Those two factors alone are a clear call to top PA programs like ours at Marquette to be nimble and quickly address this important growing health care need."

The program, which is ranked No. 40 in the nation by U.S. News and World Report, has since its inception in the 1990s grown into a highly recognized destination program, said MaryJo Wiemiller, PA-C, M.S., clinical associate professor, program director and chair of Physician Assistant Studies. The PA program boasts a 100-percent pass rate on national board exams for the past nine consecutive years, as well as a 100-percent job placement rate for graduates within six months of completion.

"This new facility will enable us to build off our current strengths to not only grow the program in numbers to meet market demand, but also to better deliver on our promise to educate the most highly qualified, mission-centric health care providers who aim to be the difference," Wiemiller said.

About the facilityThe PA program is currently located at the northwest corner of North 17th Street and West Wells Street in a former clinic that was constructed in 1954.

"The program has outgrown its space in an outdated building that does not allow for cost-effective expansion or modernization," said Lora Strigens, vice president for planning and strategy. "It is no longer suited to appropriately train the next generation of health care providers."

The new building's location on the southwestern edge of campus puts the PA program closer to Schroeder Complex, which houses the College of Health Sciences' other programs, as well as the university's planned BioDiscovery District.

Further, Strigens noted that the facility will be "welcoming and community-facing," highly visible from I-94 to the south. It will also begin to transform the university's Clybourn Street corridor, a key component of Marquette's campus master plan, she said.

C.D. Smith Construction is the construction management firm for the project; HGA and Groth Design are the architects.