Texas Jurisprudence Exam Physician Assistant Practice Exam

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What happens if a physician assistant cannot confirm their alternate physician's qualifications?

The physician assistant cannot prescribe

If a physician assistant cannot confirm their alternate physician's qualifications, they cannot prescribe. This is based on the requirement that physician assistants must have a supervising physician or an alternate physician whose credentials have been verified. Ensuring that the qualifications of the supervising or alternate physician are confirmed is critical to maintaining safe and effective patient care. Without this confirmation, the physician assistant lacks the necessary assurance that they are working under appropriate supervision, which is essential for prescriptions that require a physician's oversight. The need for verification protects both the physician assistant and patients, as prescribing medications involves significant responsibility and must comply with legal and regulatory standards. This ensures the physician assistant is operating under the proper authority and the supervision required to maintain patient safety. The other choices would not uphold the requisite standards set forth for physician assistants. Proceeding with delegated authority without confirmation could lead to violations and risk to patient safety. Consulting the Medical Board may be a prudent action, but it does not allow the physician assistant to continue prescribing without proper verification. Ignoring the verification entirely would be irresponsible and could lead to serious legal consequences.

They may proceed with delegated authority

They can consult the Medical Board for guidance

They should ignore the verification

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