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UNC to train special forces vets as physician assistants

By The Herald Sun  
   December 05, 2012

To build on the training of Special Forces medical sergeants, the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and the state's largest insurer, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, announced Monday a plan to create a two-year master's degree program. The program would prepare veteran medical sergeants to be physician assistants. "They deserve opportunities to continue their healing work when their military service ends, and when they get that chance, we will all benefit," said Holden Thorp, chancellor of UNC-Chapel Hill, at a news conference at the Rizzo Conference Center in Chapel Hill. The program would enroll its first class in 2015. It would start with about 15 students, said Dr. Amelia Drake, executive associate dean of academic programs at the UNC School of Medicine. The program needs approval from the UNC Board of Governors, and Drake said they'll be seeking accreditation.

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