Oregon Collaborating Physician Jobs – Top Opportunities for Licensed Physicians
Oregon’s modern, streamlined PA collaboration framework requires every Physician Associate to have a written collaboration agreement before practicing. With no filing requirements, no chart review mandates, and a flexible practice-level model, Oregon is one of the most straightforward collaboration opportunities — across Portland, Salem, Eugene, and beyond.
Oregon grants full practice authority to Nurse Practitioners. Oregon NPs can diagnose, treat, and prescribe independently without any physician collaboration. Oregon’s physician collaboration opportunity is specific to Physician Associates (PAs) — what Oregon now officially calls Physician Assistants following a June 2024 title change — who must have a written collaboration agreement before they can practice. Oregon’s framework is one of the most modern and administratively lean in the country.
Oregon’s Modern “Physician Associate” Framework — Flexible, PA-Led, and Administratively Lean
Oregon modernized its PA practice law through HB 3036 (2021) and HB 2584 (2023), fully transitioning all Oregon PAs to a collaborative practice model by December 31, 2023. In 2024, Oregon also renamed “Physician Assistants” to “Physician Associates” — a national trend that Oregon adopted via statute.
Under Oregon’s framework, every Physician Associate must have a written Collaboration Agreement signed by a physician or employer. The agreement is not filed with the Oregon Medical Board — it’s kept on file at the practice and only produced on request. There is no mandatory chart review, no supervision requirement, and no proximity restriction. The degree of collaboration is determined at the practice level based on community standards of care and the PA’s education, training, and experience.
Oregon’s law is clear: the collaboration agreement does not assign supervisory responsibility or legal liability to the physician for the PA’s care. Your role is collaborative — not supervisory. This makes Oregon one of the lowest-administrative-burden collaboration states in the series.
Oregon State Requirements
All Oregon Physician Associates (PAs) must have a written Collaboration Agreement before practicing medicine. The agreement is signed by the PA and a physician or employer. It is NOT filed with the Oregon Medical Board — kept on file at the primary practice location. OAR 847-050-0082; ORS 677.495
The agreement must include: the PA’s name, license, and primary location; the physician or employer’s name; a general description of the collaboration process; and — for PAs with fewer than 2,000 post-graduate clinical hours — a Specified Collaboration Plan. OAR 847-050-0082(2)
Chart review and supervision are NOT required in the collaboration agreement. The degree of autonomous judgment is determined at the practice level by community standards of care and the PA’s education, training, and experience. OAR 847-050-0082
The collaboration agreement does NOT assign supervisory responsibility or represent acceptance of legal liability by the physician for the care provided by the PA. The physician’s role is collaborative, not supervisory. OMB FAQ HB 3036
Oregon officially renamed “Physician Assistants” to “Physician Associates” effective June 6, 2024 (HB 4010). No ratio cap specified in Oregon statute. No proximity requirement. The Oregon Medical Board (OMB) governs Physician Associates under ORS 677.
Oregon’s Two-Track Collaboration Model
Oregon uses a 2,000-hour experience threshold to determine whether a Specified Collaboration Plan is required within the agreement. We match you based on the PA’s experience level.
PAs With Fewer Than 2,000 Post-Graduate Hours
The collaboration agreement must include a Specified Collaboration Plan — an additional component that outlines a more structured collaboration process appropriate for early-career PAs.
• PA must provide evidence of fewer than 2,000 hours to the physician or employer
• The Specified Collaboration Plan defines the additional oversight structure
• The plan can be removed or modified only by written amendment — it does NOT automatically expire at 2,000 hours
• Physician, employer, or PA may agree to continue the plan beyond 2,000 hours for any reason
PAs With 2,000+ Post-Graduate Hours
A standard Collaboration Agreement without a Specified Collaboration Plan is sufficient. The degree of collaboration is determined at the practice level by community standard of care and the PA’s education, training, and experience.
• No mandatory chart review, supervision, or structured oversight plan required
• The physician’s role is collaborative — available for consultation and referral as indicated
• Broad practice-level discretion for both physician and PA in structuring collaboration
• Lean administrative burden — one of the most flexible frameworks in the series
We match you with Physician Associates whose experience level suits your availability and practice scope — and structure the appropriate agreement tier from the start.
What a Collaborating Physician Does in Oregon
Oregon explicitly states the collaboration agreement does not make you legally responsible for the PA’s care. Your role is collaborative — supporting patient safety and clinical standards at the practice level.
Sign the Collaboration Agreement
Execute a written Collaboration Agreement with the Physician Associate covering their practice location, collaboration process, and — for early-career PAs — the Specified Collaboration Plan. Agreement is kept on file at the practice.
Define the Collaboration Process
Describe the manner in which the PA collaborates with you as required by OAR 847-050-0082. This is determined at the practice level based on community standards — no state-mandated minimums beyond the agreement’s general requirements.
Specified Collaboration Plan (Early-Career PAs)
For PAs with fewer than 2,000 post-graduate hours, include a Specified Collaboration Plan in the agreement defining the structured oversight appropriate for an early-career PA in this practice setting.
Be Available for Consultation
Be reachable for collaboration, consultation, and referral as indicated by patient needs and community standard of care. Oregon places no on-site or geographic requirement on the collaborating physician.
Provide a Copy to the PA
Under Oregon law, the physician or employer entering the collaboration agreement must provide a copy to the PA. This ensures both parties have documentation of the agreed collaboration structure on file.
Earn Income Per Collaboration
Receive income for each Physician Associate you collaborate with. Oregon’s lean, non-supervisory collaboration model is one of the least time-intensive in the series — making it efficient for generating additional income.
Get Started in 3 Simple Steps
Many physicians in our network are matched and onboarded within 24 to 48 hours.
Apply
Submit your basic information and credentials. It takes less than 2 minutes and there is no obligation to proceed.
Get Matched
We connect you with Oregon Physician Associate practices that need a collaborating physician — across Portland, Salem, Eugene, and beyond.
Start Collaborating
Begin with full support, a compliant Oregon Collaboration Agreement — with or without a Specified Collaboration Plan based on the PA’s experience — and no OMB filing to navigate.
A Smarter Way to Work as an Oregon Collaborating Physician
Oregon’s modern framework is intentionally lean — but structuring the right agreement for each PA’s experience tier still matters. We ensure every collaboration is set up correctly from day one.
We connect you with PA practices
No searching, no cold outreach. Oregon Physician Associate clinic opportunities come directly to you.
Start within 24–48 hours
Many Oregon physicians in our network are matched and onboarded within 24 to 48 hours. No OMB pre-filing means faster starts.
OAR 847-050-0082-compliant agreements
Our agreements meet Oregon Medical Board requirements — including the correct agreement tier for each PA’s experience level and the Specified Collaboration Plan when required.
No supervisory liability
Oregon’s law explicitly states the collaboration agreement does not assign legal responsibility to the physician — one of the clearest protections in any state’s framework.
No chart review, no supervision mandate
Oregon’s law requires no chart review and no supervision in the collaboration agreement — making this one of the most time-efficient collaboration states in the entire series.
Remote, minimal time
No proximity requirement. No on-site visits. Oregon is designed for a modern, low-overhead collaboration model that fits around your existing schedule.
Oregon Clinic Types We Work With
Physician Associate–staffed clinics across Oregon — from Portland’s urban healthcare corridor to the Willamette Valley and Oregon Coast — all require a written collaboration agreement before practice begins.
This Opportunity Is Ideal For
Physicians with an active Oregon medical license in good standing with the OMB
Physicians seeking a low-overhead, remote-first collaboration arrangement
Those looking to maximize income with minimal administrative burden
Physicians comfortable with a practice-level, collaborative (not supervisory) framework
Your Oregon medical license must be active and in good standing with the Oregon Medical Board. Oregon’s collaboration agreement does not require your physical presence and does not assign supervisory liability — making it one of the most straightforward collaborating physician roles in the country.
Oregon Collaborating Physician Jobs — PA-Only Remote Physician Jobs Across Portland, Eugene, and the Beaver State
Oregon’s NPs practice with full practice authority, so the physician income opportunity here is entirely in the Physician Associate (PA) collaboration market — every Oregon PA needs a written Collaboration Agreement with a physician permanently, with no ratio cap, no proximity requirement, and Oregon’s unique no-liability collaborative framework. This makes Oregon one of the most accessible markets for remote physician jobs and part time physician jobs on the West Coast, with consistent demand across Portland, Eugene, Salem, Bend, and Oregon’s growing telehealth sector.
Remote Physician Jobs — No Proximity, No Liability, No On-Site
Oregon’s PA Collaboration Agreement framework imposes no geographic proximity requirement, no chart review mandate, and — uniquely — no supervisory liability for the collaborating physician. Oregon law explicitly states the physician does not assume responsibility for the PA’s independent clinical acts. For physicians seeking remote physician jobs with the clearest liability boundary of any West Coast state, Oregon’s collaborative model is in a class of its own.
Part Time Physician Jobs — No Cap, Permanent Demand
Oregon has no ratio cap on the number of PAs a physician may collaborate with, and no PA independence pathway — every Oregon PA needs a physician collaborator permanently. This creates durable, long-term part time physician jobs that don’t expire. Physicians can hold multiple concurrent Oregon Collaboration Agreements, building a scalable portfolio of physician side jobs across Portland’s Pearl District and Eastside wellness corridor and Oregon’s growing suburban and rural markets.
Physician Consulting Jobs — Portland and Bend Medspa Corridor
Portland’s Pearl District and NW 23rd Avenue, Bend’s Old Mill District, and Eugene’s downtown wellness market generate consistent demand for physician consulting jobs beyond standard PA Collaboration Agreements. PA-operated medspas, GLP-1 weight loss clinics, and telehealth practices across Oregon seek physician consulting jobs for protocol development, payer credentialing, and QA oversight — typically structured as retainer engagements alongside collaboration income.
Physician Advisor Roles for Oregon NP Clinics
Oregon NPs are fully independent but many NP-led practices voluntarily engage a physician advisor for payer credentialing, QA governance, and protocol oversight. These physician advisor jobs are structured at the practice level with no Oregon Medical Board filing obligation and are available as remote physician advisor jobs for Oregon-licensed physicians statewide.
CollaboratingPhysician.com maintains an active pipeline of collaborating physician jobs across Oregon and matches physicians with PA practices within 24 to 48 hours. Whether you are looking for collaborating physician jobs, remote physician jobs in Portland or Eugene, part time physician jobs across the Bend and Salem corridor, or remote physician advisor jobs with Oregon-based telehealth platforms, we structure Collaboration Agreements to meet OAR 847-050-0082 requirements and manage every arrangement throughout.
Frequently Asked Questions — Oregon
Start Building Additional Income as an Oregon Collaborating Physician
Oregon Physician Associate practices need collaborating physicians. We connect you with them and handle compliant Collaboration Agreements — with no OMB filing, no supervisory liability, and no chart review requirements to manage.
Apply Now — Takes Less Than 2 MinutesOr call us at +1 (817) 857-2726 to get started today.
Serving physicians and Physician Associate clinics across Oregon, including Portland, Salem, Eugene, Gresham, Hillsboro, Bend, Beaverton, Medford, Springfield, Corvallis, Albany, Lake Oswego, Tigard, Keizer, McMinnville, Grants Pass, Oregon City, Tualatin, West Linn, Ashland, and surrounding areas.
Collaborating Physician Intake Form
Complete the form below to explore collaborating physician jobs with Collaborating Physician. Our team will review your information and connect you with qualified healthcare professionals in need of oversight. Start earning residual income in a flexible role—submit your details today to discover your next collaborating physician job opportunity!