AA (Anesthesiologist Assistant) Medical Anesthetist
-really? do you have to mention what "AA" stands for on an AA forum? and theres no need to mention that an AA is a "medical anesthetist"
AA-C (Certified Anesthesiologist Assistant) Medical Anesthetist
--again, redundant post. Why even make the distinction between AA and AA-C?
AARN (Anesthesiologist Assistant, Registered Nurse) Medical Anesthetist
-- now you're just making up new acronyms/titles, lol... "AARN".
RN, AA-C (Registered Nurse, Certified Anesthesiologist Assistant) Medical Anesthetist
-- so wait? there's a difference now between an "AARN" and a "RN, AA-C"? you really need to educate us on all these new titles
APA-C (Certified Anesthesiology Physician Assistant) Medical Anesthetist
AA-S (Student Anesthesiologist Assistant) Student Medical Anesthetist
RN, AA-S (Registered Nurse, Student Anesthesiologist Assistant) Student Medical Anesthetist
PA-C, AA-S (Certified Physician Assistant, Student Anesthesiologist Assistant) Student Medical Anesthetist
--- redundant, redundant, redundant... you could have simply stated
"i'd like to hear from AAs and AA students with various backgrounds such as pre-med, nursing, physician assistant, etc"
and why even address the ACT model? are there any AAs out there NOT working in the ACT model?
I truly hope something with such poor communication and writing skills doesn't make it into AA school, no matter how excited you are about the profession. AAs need bright, smart people representing them, not someone who writes like a retard.
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