Nursing vs Physician Assistant: Which Patient Care Path Fits You Best?

Physician Assistant giving a checkup

If you’re drawn to helping people heal, offering comfort in difficult moments, and building a career that truly matters, you’re already thinking like a healthcare professional. The next question is simple — what’s the best path to get there?

Healthcare careers consistently rank among the best in the nation for job satisfaction, growth, and impact. For students who feel called to serve others with compassion and skill, few roles are as rewarding as caring directly for patients.

Two of the fastest growing and most respected roles are nurses and physician assistants (PAs). According to U.S. News & World Report and the Bureau of Labor Statistics, both professions are expected to grow much faster than average over the next decade — and both rank near the top for salary and job security.

While nurses and PAs share the same mission of providing excellent patient care, the way they train, practice, and interact with patients can look very different. Understanding those differences is the first step in finding a healthcare career that fits you best.

Similar Callings, Different Paths: How Nurses and PAs Serve Patients

Nurses and PAs share a common goal: improving patients’ lives through skilled, compassionate care. They work side by side in hospitals, clinics, and community settings. But they get there through different educational paths and professional models.

Here is the big picture:

PathPrimary FocusEducation LevelWork Model
NursingPatient-centered care, advocacy, long-term relationshipsBS in Nursing → RN license
Master’s or Doctorate in Nursing (optional)
RN: collaborative with providers
DNP: independent within nursing scope (per state regulations)
Physician Assistant (PA)Medical diagnosis, treatment, and proceduresBachelor’s → Master’s in PA Studies (MMScPA) → PA licensureCollaborative practitioner within the medical scope of practice

Both are integral to patient care and outcomes — but the way they practice and the education required differ in important ways.

The Nursing Path: Education, Licensure, and Career Growth

Nursing is one of the most versatile and personally fulfilling careers in healthcare. It attracts students who want to build relationships, provide hands-on care, and serve in roles ranging from bedside to administration.

Steps To Become a Nurse: Education and Licensure

Most nurses begin with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), which combines science courses, clinical experience, and professional preparation. At Cedarville University, the BSN program integrates excellent academics with a biblical worldview, preparing students not only to pass the NCLEX-RN licensure exam but to care for patients with both competence and compassion.

After earning a BSN and becoming a Registered Nurse (RN), you can continue to advance:

What Nurses Do: Scope of Practice Explained

Registered nurses assess patients, coordinate care, administer treatments, educate families, and advocate for health promotion. As nurses pursue higher degrees, their scope broadens:

  • Nurse Practitioners (NPs) diagnose, prescribe, and manage chronic conditions, often independently depending on state laws.
  • Nurse leaders oversee units and quality initiatives.
  • Nurse educators train the next generation of caregivers.

Nursing is a career you can grow with.

You can move into new roles, keep a healthy balance between work and family, and step into leadership — all without leaving the profession you love.

Why Nursing Appeals to So Many Students

  • Relational focus: Nurses often spend more time with patients than any other provider.
  • Career stability: Nursing is consistently ranked among the most trusted and in-demand careers in the U.S.
  • Multiple entry points: From hospitals to missions, schools, and research, nurses fit almost anywhere healthcare happens.
  • Faith integration: Nursing offers daily opportunities to live out Christ’s compassion and grace at the bedside.

At Cedarville, that faith-driven approach is central. Students are trained to see nursing as a ministry of healing, combining clinical skills with spiritual care.

The Physician Assistant (PA) Path: Education, Practice, and Opportunities

If you’re fascinated by diagnosing illness, developing treatment plans, and working closely with physicians and patients, then the PA route might fit you perfectly.

PAs (physician associates/physician assistants) are licensed healthcare professionals who are nationally certified, state licensed, and practice medicine in every specialty and setting.

As trusted, rigorously educated and trained healthcare professionals, PAs are dedicated to expanding access to care and transforming health and wellness through patient-centered, team-based medical practice. They perform exams, order and interpret tests, prescribe medications, assist in surgery, and manage patient care across specialties.

Steps To Become a Physician Assistant (PA)

To become a PA, you’ll need to complete:

  1. A bachelor’s degree (often in biology or a pre-PA major).
  2. A master’s-level PA program — such as the Master of Medical Science in Physician Assistant Studies (MMScPA).
  3. The Physician Assistant National Certifying Exam (PANCE).

Cedarville University offers a pre-PA track in several majors. Students may major in allied health, biology, or exercise science while completing all required PA prerequisites and clinical experience.

What PAs Do: Scope of Practice Explained

PAs are trained under the medical model, which emphasizes diagnosing, treating, and preventing disease. They work in collaboration with the physician, but their role is highly autonomous in most settings.

Typical PA responsibilities include:

  • Conducting physical exams
  • Diagnosing illnesses and injuries
  • Ordering and interpreting lab results and imaging
  • Prescribing medications
  • Assisting in surgeries or emergency procedures
  • Counseling patients on prevention and wellness
  • Diagnosing illnesses and injuries
  • Ordering and interpreting lab results and imaging
  • Prescribing medications
  • Assisting in surgeries or emergency procedures
  • Counseling patients on prevention and wellness

Because of this medical focus, many students drawn to the PA path enjoy critical thinking, problem-solving, and fast-paced clinical environments.

Why Many Students Choose the PA Route

  • Shorter path to practice than becoming a physician (usually six to seven total years of education after high school).
  • Wide variety of specialties — PAs can work in family medicine, surgery, cardiology, emergency care, and more.
  • High demand and excellent salaries, with median pay above $130,000 nationally.
  • Strong collaboration with physicians and healthcare teams.

Like nursing, the PA profession values empathy, communication, and service — qualities that thrive in a faith-based learning community like Cedarville’s.

BSN vs Pre-PA Degree: Comparing Education and Training Time

Both careers require significant education and training, but the timelines and focus differ.

Training StageNursing PathPhysician Assistant Path
Undergraduate DegreeBSN (4 years)
Clinical experiences included in training
Pre-PA Bachelor’s (4 years)
Clinical experience typically gained outside of coursework (~1,000 hours)
Graduate StudyOptional (MSN, DNP)Required (PA master’s, 2–3 years)
Licensure / CertificationNCLEX-RN
After bachelor's degree
PANCE
After master’s degree
Total Time to Practice~4 years (RN) or 6–8 years (NP)~6–7 years total

Clinical experiences included in training

Training StageNursing PathPhysician Assistant Path
Undergraduate DegreeBSN (4 years)Pre-PA Bachelor’s (4 years)
Clinical experience required for applying to PA school is often obtained outside the program (~1,000 hours)
Graduate StudyOptional (MSN, DNP)Required (PA master’s, 2–3 years)
Licensure / CertificationNCLEX-RN
Obtained after bachelor’s degree
PANCE
Obtained after master’s degree
Total Time to Practice~4 years (RN) or 6–8 years (NP)~6–7 years total

Both routes demand dedication — but the type of learning differs. Nursing emphasizes holistic patient care and advocacy, while the PA path focuses on medical decision-making and diagnostics.

How Nurses and Physician Assistants Work Together in Patient Care

In real-world practice, nurses and PAs often collaborate closely. For example, in a hospital:

  • The RN monitors vital signs, provides bedside care, and updates the PA or physician about changes.
  • The PA or NP assesses new symptoms, orders tests, and adjusts the treatment plan.

Each role complements the other. Nurses often form the backbone of continuous patient care, while advanced practice providers (PAs and NPs) serve as diagnostic and treatment partners within the medical team.

Both paths lead to impactful, respected, and mission-driven careers that are in strong demand and offer competitive salaries. They are careers of service and purpose that make a difference every single day.

Faith and Compassion in Healthcare: Learning To Serve Well

At Cedarville University, healthcare education is more than academics — it’s a calling.

Both the School of Nursing and the School of Allied Health and Psychology train students to care for patients with Christlike compassion and ethical integrity.

Distinctives of Cedarville’s Approach

  • Christ-centered curriculum: Every course connects faith and learning, from anatomy to clinical ethics.
  • Rigorous academics: Students are well-prepared for graduate programs, licensure exams, and clinical excellence.
  • Hands-on experience: Labs, simulation centers, and clinical placements provide real-world training.
  • Global mission focus: Opportunities for medical missions and cross-cultural service help students live out the Gospel through healthcare.

Whether you’re learning to start an IV or interpret an MRI, you’re also learning to serve with humility, integrity, and love.

Is Nursing or Physician Assistant the Right Fit for You?

Choosing between nursing and PA studies often comes down to your personality, interests, and long-term goals.

Here are a few questions to guide your decision:

If you answer “yes” to most of these, nursing may be your best fit:

  • Do you value ongoing relationships with patients?
  • Are you drawn to hands-on care and holistic health?
  • Would you enjoy opportunities in education, management, or community health?
  • Do you want flexibility to change specialties or balance family life over time?

If you answer “yes” to most of these, the PA path might be ideal:

  • Are you fascinated by medicine, diagnostics, and treatment decisions?
  • Do you like working closely with physicians in a fast-paced, team environment?
  • Would you enjoy rotating through different specialties during your career?
  • Are you prepared for an intensive graduate program focused on the medical model?

Neither path is “better” — they’re simply different ways to serve patients and God through healthcare.

Cedarville University: Preparing You for Either Path

Whether you feel called to nursing or to the PA profession, your foundation matters. Cedarville offers exceptional academic and spiritual preparation for both.

For Nursing Students

For Pre-PA Students

  • Pre-PA track with majors like allied health, biology, or exercise science.
  • Academic advising tailored to PA school prerequisites, including the PA program at Cedarville.
  • Access to shadowing and clinical experience through local healthcare partners.
  • Emphasis on Christ-centered ethics and compassionate patient interaction.

Cedarville’s community encourages every student to see healthcare as a ministry — to combine excellence with empathy, skill with service, and professionalism with purpose.

Two Paths, One Calling: Making an Impact Through Patient Care

Whether you become a nurse or a physician assistant, your work will change lives. You’ll comfort the sick, support families, and reflect God’s love through every patient encounter.

The choice isn’t about which career is more prestigious — it’s about where your strengths and passions align.

  • Nursing offers deep relationships, flexibility, and leadership opportunities.
  • The PA route offers medical depth, diagnostic challenges, and broad clinical versatility.

Both require intelligence, resilience, and a heart for service. And both can begin at a place like Cedarville University that prepares you academically and spiritually to make an eternal impact.

FAQs: Nursing vs Physician Assistant Career Questions

Can I apply to PA school with a nursing degree?

Yes, though most PA students pursue biology or allied health majors. Prerequisites vary by program.

How long does it take to become a nurse practitioner or PA?

It typically takes six to seven years total for either path (undergraduate plus graduate study).

Are both nursing and PA careers in high demand?

Yes — both rank among the top healthcare careers for growth and salary potential.

Does Cedarville offer both NP and PA pathways?

Yes — a BSN in nursing or pre-PA track (via allied health or biology) prepares students for either direction.

Ready to explore your next step?

Learn how Cedarville’s nursing and physician assistant programs can prepare you to serve Christ through healthcare and make a difference in the lives of others. Wherever He leads, Cedarville will help you find and follow your calling.

Explore Cedarville's nursing programs

Explore Cedarville's physician assistant program

Posted in Healthcare

This article was written and reviewed by members of the Cedarville University Healthcare Experts blog team — faculty contributors with academic and professional expertise in healthcare.