Doctor of Medical Science
Overview
The ºìÐÓ¶ÌÊÓƵ Fox University College of Medical Science program offers a 36-credit Doctor of Medical Science (DMSc) degree. New cohorts in the DMSc begin studies every January during the second year in the PA program. Though connected by overlapping course work, the MMSc PA and DMSc programs are separate degree offerings.
The revolutionary development of this dual degree allows for 12 credit hours of advanced-standing credit from your first year of PA school, to be carried over to the DMSc followed by nine credit hours of dual enrollment during your second year, allowing you to complete the degree with just one additional semester of three online classes (15 credit hours) after successful graduation from the MMSc PA program.
Mission
This program seeks to educate and prepare future Physician Assistants (PAs) to become equitable, spiritually-minded, compassionate healthcare leaders with an emphasis on team-based healthcare delivery, collaboration, human diversity, and patient-centered care.
Program Goals
The goals of the Doctor of Medical Science program are to advance the master’s level PA in three areas:
- Clinical Practice. Develop PAs with an advanced level of competence and confidence in disaster and global healthcare
- Leadership Development. Equip PAs with advanced skills to become vision-shapers in their local and global healthcare communities
- Scholarship. Broaden the scope and depth of competence in scholarship to promote self-directed, goal-focused, lifelong scholars and competent and compassionate healthcare providers
Program Core Values
- Inquiry: Prepare for community engagement through critical thinking and analysis
- Importance: Understand how knowledge and experience develops skills used in the service of humanity
- Impression: Connect learning to context while overcoming barriers and challenges with the help of others
Graduate Outcomes
Accreditation
Accreditation for ºìÐÓ¶ÌÊÓƵ Fox University’s DMSc PA program comes from the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities.
The Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU) is recognized by the United States Department of Education (USDE) and the Council on Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA) to accredit postsecondary institutions. NWCCU is incorporated as a legally established, private 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation and accredits institutions of higher education in Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and British Columbia, along with other domestic and international geographic areas. NWCCU recognizes higher education institutions for performance, integrity, and quality to merit the confidence of the educational community and the public. Our accreditation of postsecondary institutions is a voluntary, non-governmental, self-regulatory process of quality assurance and institutional improvement.
Accreditation or pre-accreditation by NWCCU also qualifies institutions and enrolled students for access to Title IV federal funds to support teaching, research, and student financial aid.
The program’s accreditation history can be viewed on the NWCCU website at https://nwccu.org/.
Admission Requirements
Transfer Credit
Grading
Students enrolled in GFU’s DMSc Program must maintain adherence to the program standard of academic performance and professionalism. Due to the sequential nature of the curriculum, students must successfully complete all courses for a given semester before becoming eligible to take courses in the subsequent semester.
DMSc grades are given as A, B, C and F, including experiential (clinical) course grades
Graduation Requirements
In order to graduate with a master of medical science
- Satisfactorily complete a minimum of 36 semester hours of the DMSc curriculum with a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or above.
- A grade of B- or above is acceptable completion of any course. See department student handbook for grading policy.
- Successfully pass all the components of the DMSc program.
- Demonstrate they have met all graduate competencies and learning outcomes
- Be in good professional standing.