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Mission Statement

To provide the uniformed services with highly competent, compassionate physician assistants who model integrity, strive for leadership excellence, and are committed to lifelong learning

 

Vision Statement

To be recognized as the world-class leader in physician assistant education

 

Guiding Principles

To provide leadership and education of the highest quality and greatest value to our students, thereby instilling a lifelong desire for growth and learning 

To immerse faculty and students in an environment that fosters a sense of academic and professional excellence 

To educate the future leaders of military medicine to become the most dynamic and highest quality physician assistants possible

To demonstrate personal integrity and ethical conduct

 

IPAP ACCREDITATION

At its September 2025 meeting, the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant, Inc. (ARC-PA) placed the Interservice Physician Assistant Program sponsored by U.S. Army Medical Center of Excellence on Accreditation-Probation status until its next review in October 2027

 

Probation accreditation is a temporary accreditation status initially of not less than two years. However, that period may be extended by the ARC-PA for up to an additional two years if the ARC-PA finds that the program is making substantial progress toward meeting all applicable standards but requires additional time to come into full compliance. Probation accreditation status is granted, at the sole discretion of the ARC-PA, when a program holding an accreditation status of Accreditation - Provisional or Accreditation - Continued does not, in the judgment of the ARC-PA, meet the Standards or when the capability of the program to provide an acceptable educational experience for its students is threatened. 

 

Once placed on probation, a program that fails to comply with accreditation requirements in a timely manner, as specified by the ARC-PA, may be scheduled for a focused site visit and is subject to having its accreditation withdrawn. 

 

Specific questions regarding the Program and its plans should be directed to the Program Director and/or the appropriate institutional official(s). 

The program’s accreditation history can be viewed on the ARC-PA website at: http://www.arc-pa.org/accreditation-history-interservice/


 

IPAP 2025 5 Year Pass Rate

IPAP 2025 PANCE Performance Report

 

 

  IPAP ARC-PA STUDENT ATTRITION DATA

 

Graduated Classes

Class of 2022-3

Class of 2023-1

Class of 2023-2

Maximum entering class size (as approved by ARC-PA)

80

80

80

Entering class size

88*

69

66

Graduates

68

58

53

* Attrition rate

22.7%

21.7%

19.7%

**Graduation rate

77.3%

84.5%

80.3%

Comments: Class 2022-3 completed the program in Feb 2025, 23-1 in Jun 2025, 23-2 Oct 2025; *Only 67 started with 22-3, there were 21 joiners (11 of which left program); At no time where there more than 80 students assigned to the cohort. The "joiners" moved in and out of the cohort over the course of 29 months. The cohort had 67 original members and at the beginning of the first semester had two decelerated students restarting (69).

*Attention rate calculation number of students who attritted from cohort (decelerated + withdraws + dismissals) divided by the (entering class size + number joining class cohort).

**Graduation rate calculation: Number of cohort graduates divided by the (entering class size + the number joining class cohort).

 

Students from IPAP Class 22-2 conduct the Oath of Commissioned Officers after graduating Phase 2 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

 

 A group of people in uniform

Description automatically generated with low confidence

Students from IPAP Class 22-2 conduct the Oath of Commissioned Officers after graduating Phase 2 at Blanchfield Army Community Hospital.