Accepted: Elsa - Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia

Undergraduate education: Portland State University

Overall GPA: 3.80 (undergrad in Economics 3.73, post-bacc 4.0)

Science GPA: My post-baccalaureate GPA was 4.0 which included almost all of my pre-reqs as I had not really taken much science before. I cannot remember my overall science including undergrad but would have been a little lower with a couple Bs freshman year.

GRE: N/A

PA-CAT: Did not take

Total PCE hours: 1,100 at time of application Optometric/Ophthalmic Technician. No certification, was a medical assistant essentially for an eye clinic. Duties included: call back and room patient, ask and document HPI, input medications/allergies, measure visual acuity with eye chart, perform mini exam (are pupils regular, reactive?, eye movements ok? Etc), measure eye pressure using handheld device (after numbing eye drop of course), and insert dilation eye drops. Loved it, great experience working in a large clinic with lots of other techs and doctors but also developed one on one relationships with the doctors I worked for. I learned a lot about the eye and common disorders! Downside was no PAs worked there. Having a lower PCE was the main barrier to being accepted and just of note I didn’t get any interviews for any schools with a 1,000 PCE requirement and only got moved to next stage/interviews at schools with 200/500 PCE requirements.

Total HCE hours: 0

Shadowing hours: 40, shadowed an Oncology PA in person before COVID (was a friend of a friend) then online shadowing hours during COVID in a wide amount of fields.

Volunteer hours: 50. One of my weakest application points! Volunteered at food banks and checked people in for COVID vaccines

How many times did you apply?:  1

Age: 29

Gender: Female

Why PA? After getting a degree in Economics I worked desk jobs for multiple years and grew to dislike the work environment and the work itself. I always wished I went down a different path and then one day I realized I should just go for it. I found PA after googling jobs for empathetic people, as goofy as that sounds!

How many programs did you apply to? 13

How many programs did you interview with and what were the outcomes? 3 interviews. 2 waitlists, 1 acceptance

Where will you be attending? Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia

Anything you found interesting about interviews? How varied they were. One was MMI (which I actually loved because you got to show yourself instead of just saying “I’m empathetic” over and over), one was an all day event, and then one was just two short interviews with two different people.

Were there any helpful resources (books, websites, webinars, etc) you used to get through prerequisites courses, the application or interview process? For school: “Organic chemistry as a second language” as a must. Savanna’s interview book was helpful. I wrote out lots of answers to questions I found to practice talking about myself and coming up with examples. Overall try and immerse yourself in the medical world: watch all the virtual shadowing you can find, read medical related books (my favorites: “Salt in my Soul”, “Between Two Kingdoms”, “Black Man in a White Coat”, “This is Going to Hurt”, “The Emperor of all Maladies”, “When Breath Becomes Air”, “Being Mortal”), listen to podcasts, etc!

Any advice for other pre-PA students? Things I was happy I did: -Got my pre-reqs done and focused on getting As, then worked full time for PCE after (I was able to be my best at both without the stress from the other, I was happy I separated them). -Spent time reading medical related books, listening to podcasts, virtual shadowing. I feel like in PA school I’ve been able to go “hey I’ve heard that before” as well as growing myself to be more well-rounded. Things I would have done differently if applied again: -Took the GRE, had less schools I could apply too and more competition. -More volunteer, shadowing, and PCE hours. -Compared myself to others less, social media shows peoples highlights and may not always be the truth. Become a better applicant for yourself and for your future patients - not to tick off boxes or to be able to post on Instagram. Highlight what makes you unique. Also take your time, I see many young applicants stressing to get things done NOW that they are not soaking up experiences. Take time to learn about yourself and others and mature into an amazing future provider!

Where can we find you? (Instagram, TikTok, Website, etc) - Instagram: @elsabyrholdt. Feel free to DM me!