Advanced Practice

The physician assistant's locum tenens guide: How to succeed in a locums assignment

May 26, 2026
PA with stethoscope in a hospital setting

This is the fourth part in a five-part series on everything physician assistants need to know about working locum tenens. If you missed the previous installments, you can read them here:

Getting the assignment is only the beginning. What makes a locum tenens PA successful is what happens after the contract is signed.

The good news is that success in locums doesn’t require being perfect. It requires preparation, adaptability, and strong communication. If you can walk into a new environment ready to learn, ready to help, and clear about your scope, you’re already in a strong position to succeed.

Start preparing before day one

Your first assignment will go more smoothly if you treat preparation as part of the job.

Before you arrive, make sure you understand:

The patient population

Your expected responsibilities

Workflow and documentation systems

Orientation details

Who your go-to contacts are

What the team expects from a locum PA

This is also the time to be honest about your experience and comfort level. Locums isn’t about pretending you know everything. It’s about stepping in with clarity and professionalism.

What to ask before you arrive

A lot of first-assignment stress can be reduced by asking practical questions early. For example:

How long is orientation?

What charting system will I be using?

What does a typical day look like?

Who is available for clinical questions?

What procedures or patient types are most common?

What are the expectations around productivity, call, and handoffs?

Is there anything the team wishes locums clinicians knew before arriving?

These questions help you prepare and signal that you want to be useful from day one.

Get oriented quickly, but don’t rush trust

Every site has its own rhythm. Even if the clinical work is familiar, the workflow may not be.

Successful locum PAs pay close attention during onboarding. They ask how the team communicates, where common bottlenecks happen, what’s expected after hours, and when to escalate. They learn the charting system as quickly as possible and make a point of understanding not just the medicine but how things work on the ground.

picture of PA Jason Raehl and wife

When you go into a locums job, they’re really happy that you’re there—you’re there to help.

- PA Jason Raehl, orthopedic surgery

That perspective can help settle first-assignment nerves. You aren’t intruding. You’re there because you’re needed.

How to build trust quickly with a new team

You don’t need to become everyone’s favorite person in two days. But it helps to build trust early by:

  • Showing up prepared

  • Asking thoughtful questions

  • Respecting local workflows

  • Being clear about what you know and what you need

  • Following through

  • Treating support staff with respect

  • Staying calm when the pace picks up

Teams usually notice very quickly whether a locum clinician is collaborative, defensive, flexible, or checked out. A little professionalism goes a long way.

Communicate your scope and expectations early

One of the smartest things a locum PA can do is clarify expectations early and often. That includes:

  • What cases or responsibilities are yours

  • What requires physician consultation

  • How call works

  • What productivity expectations look like

  • Where the team may assume knowledge that needs to be explained

That isn’t being difficult. That’s being professional.

Adapt without overextending yourself

Locums requires flexibility, but flexibility doesn’t mean saying yes to everything. A strong locums PA adapts to new teams and workflows while still being honest about boundaries, training, and patient safety.

Flexibility is the name of the game. You'll have experience and knowledge, just be prepared to be able to think about it differently

- PA Jennifer Fluke, cardiovascular/cardiothoracic surgery

That’s the balance to aim for. Be open. Be useful. But don’t confuse adaptability with self-sacrifice.

What to do if expectations are unclear

Sometimes the challenge isn’t the medicine. It’s the ambiguity.

If you find yourself thinking, "I’m not sure what they expect from me here," don’t wait for that confusion to resolve itself. Ask for clarity. Confirm roles. Restate what you’re hearing. Loop in your recruiter if needed. Problems tend to get easier when addressed early and harder when ignored.

Handling unfamiliar workflows without spiraling

One of the most common first-assignment stressors is not knowing the local system. Even experienced PAs can feel thrown off by a new charting platform, a new referral process, a new triage style, or different assumptions around handoffs.

The goal isn’t to look like you’ve worked there for years right away. The goal is to learn quickly without getting rattled. Stay curious. Write things down. Ask the same question twice if you need to. Most teams would rather answer a clear question than clean up a preventable mistake later.

Practical habits that make assignments smoother

A few small habits can make a big difference:

Arrive early until you understand the pace

Keep a running list of workflow questions

Confirm handoff expectations

Learn the names of key people quickly

Review the next day before you leave, if possible

Be cautious about making assumptions based on how your last facility did things

These aren’t flashy strategies, but they often separate a rough assignment from a smooth one.

Mistakes first-time locum PAs should avoid

Common mistakes include:

  • Acting like every facility should work the same way

  • Avoiding questions because you want to look confident

  • Agreeing to responsibilities you don’t fully understand

  • Waiting too long to raise a concern

  • Overextending yourself to prove your value

  • Ending the assignment casually instead of professionally

None of these mistakes makes someone a bad clinician. But being aware of them can help you avoid unnecessary stress.

Avoid burnout while you’re on assignment

Locums assignments can ease burnout, but only if you don’t recreate the same habits that burned you out before.

That means paying attention to warning signs:

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Taking on extra responsibilities that were never part of the agreement

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Skipping recovery time

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Feeling pressure to prove yourself by overworking

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Letting small workflow frustrations build into larger resentment

Give the assignment your best effort, but also protect your energy.

Locums as the solution to burnout? Read how locums brought the balance back for four PAs

Leave the assignment on good terms

The end of an assignment matters just as much as the beginning. Finish strong by:

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Communicating clearly about your end date

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Closing loops on outstanding patient care responsibilities

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Leaving documentation in good order

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Thanking the team

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Sharing useful feedback with your recruiter

Leaving on good terms protects your reputation and makes extensions or future placements easier.

The bottom line

Locum success isn’t about being the loudest or the most experienced person in the room. It comes from being prepared, adaptable, communicative, and steady. When you approach an assignment that way, you make life easier for the team, better for patients, and smoother for yourself.

Go back to part three: Choosing a locums agency

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About the Author

Elizabeth Cornwall

Liz is a communications manager based in Salt Lake City. For more than a decade, she’s done a little bit of everything in the communications world — from writing about locum tenens and travel nursing, to working as an executive speech writer, to becoming a social media influencer in the world of micro goldendoodles.

See all articles from this author