Chapter
339
2003
-- S 0393 SUBSTITUTE A
Enacted
07/17/03
AN ACT
RELATING TO BOARD OF MEDICAL
LICENSURE AND DISCIPLINE
Introduced By: Senators Roberts, and Perry
Date Introduced:
February 12, 2003
It is enacted by the General Assembly
as follows:
SECTION
1. Sections 5-37-2.1, 5-37-5.1 and 5-37-10 of the General Laws in Chapter 5-
37 entitled "Board of Medical
Licensure and Discipline" are hereby amended to read as follows:
5-37-2.1.
Recertification -- Continuing medical education. -- Every Effective
beginning in calendar year 2004,
every physician licensed to practice
medicine within this state
shall, in connection with biannual
registration, on or before the first day of June of every third
year after the 1999 registration in each even-numbered year, provide
satisfactory evidence to the
board of medical licensure and
discipline that in the preceding three (3) two (2) years the
practitioner has completed a
prescribed course of continuing medical education established by the
appropriate medical or osteopathic
society and approved by rule or regulation of the director or
by the board of licensure and
discipline. The board may extend for only one six (6) month period
these educational requirements if
the board is satisfied that the applicant has suffered hardship
which prevented meeting the
educational requirement. No recertification to practice medicine in
this state is refused, nor any
certificate suspended or revoked except: (1) as provided for in this
chapter and, (2) for failure to
provide satisfactory evidence of continuing medical education as
provided for in this section.
5-37-5.1.
Unprofessional conduct. -- The term "unprofessional conduct"
as used in this
chapter includes, but not be
limited to, the following items or any combination of these items and
may be further defined by
regulations established by the board with the prior approval of the
director:
(1)
Fraudulent or deceptive procuring or use of a license or limited registration;
(2)
All advertising of medical business which is intended or has a tendency to
deceive
the public;
(3)
Conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude; conviction of a felony;
conviction
of a crime arising out of the
practice of medicine;
(4)
Abandoning a patient;
(5)
Dependence upon controlled substances, habitual drunkenness, or rendering
professional services to a patient
while the physician or limited registrant is intoxicated or
incapacitated by the use of drugs;
(6)
Promotion by a physician or limited registrant of the sale of drugs, devices,
appliances, or goods or services
provided for a patient in a manner as to exploit the patient for the
financial gain of the physician or
limited registrant;
(7)
Immoral conduct of a physician or limited registrant in the practice of
medicine;
(8)
Willfully making and filing false reports or records in the practice of
medicine;
(9)
Willfully omitting to file or record, or willfully impeding or obstructing a
filing or
recording, or inducing another
person to omit to file or record, medical or other reports as
required by law;
(10)
Failing to furnish details of a patient's medical record to succeeding
physicians,
health care facility, or other
health care providers upon proper request pursuant to section 5-37.3-
4;
(11)
Soliciting professional patronage by agents or persons or profiting from acts
of
those representing themselves to be
agents of the licensed physician or limited registrants;
(12)
Dividing fees or agreeing to split or divide the fees received for professional
services for any person for
bringing to or referring a patient;
(13)
Agreeing with clinical or bioanalytical laboratories to accept payments from
these
laboratories for individual tests
or test series for patients;
(14)
Making willful misrepresentations in treatments;
(15)
Practicing medicine with an unlicensed physician except in an accredited
preceptorship or residency training
program, or aiding or abetting unlicensed persons in the
practice of medicine;
(16)
Gross and willful overcharging for professional services; including filing of
false
statements for collection of fees
for which services are not rendered, or willfully making or
assisting in making a false claim
or deceptive claim or misrepresenting a material fact for use in
determining rights to health care
or other benefits;
(17)
Offering, undertaking, or agreeing to cure or treat disease by a secret method,
procedure, treatment or medicine;
(18)
Professional or mental incompetency;
(19)
Incompetent, negligent, or willful misconduct in the practice of medicine which
includes the rendering of medically
unnecessary services, and any departure from, or the failure
to conform to, the minimal
standards of acceptable and prevailing medical practice in his or her
area of expertise as is determined
by the board. The board need not establish actual injury to the
patient in order to adjudge a
physician or limited registrant guilty of the unacceptable medical
practice in this subdivision;
(20)
Failing to comply with the provisions of chapter 4.7 of title 23;
(21)
Surrender, revocation, suspension, limitation of privilege based on quality of
care
provided, or any other disciplinary
action against a license or authorization to practice medicine
in another state or jurisdiction;
or surrender, revocation, suspension, or any other disciplinary
action relating to a membership on
any medical staff or in any medical or professional association
or society while under disciplinary
investigation by any of those authorities or bodies for acts or
conduct similar to acts or conduct
which would constitute grounds for action as described in this
chapter;
(22)
Any Multiple adverse judgments, settlements or
awards arising from a medical
liability claims related to
acts or conduct which would constitute grounds for action as described
in this chapter;
(23)
Failing to furnish the board, its chief administrative officer, investigator or
representatives, information
legally requested by the board;
(24)
Violating any provision(s) of this chapter or the rules and regulations of the
board or
any rules or regulations
promulgated by the director or of an action, stipulation, or agreement of
the board;
(25)
Cheating on or attempting to subvert the licensing examination;
(26)
Violating any state or federal law or regulation relating to controlled
substances;
(27)
Failing to maintain standards established by peer review boards, including, but
not
limited to, standards related to
proper utilization of services, use of nonaccepted procedure,
and/or quality of care;
(28)
Medical malpractice A pattern of medical malpractice, or willful or
gross
malpractice on a particular
occasion;
(29)
Agreeing to treat a beneficiary of health insurance under title XVIII of the
Social
Security Act, 42 U.S.C. section 1395
et seq., and then charging or collecting from this beneficiary
any amount in excess of the
reasonable charge for that service as determined by the United States
secretary of health and human
services; or
(30)
Sexual contact between a physician and patient during the existence of the
physician/patient relationship;
or.
(31)
A physician providing services to a person who is making a claim as a result of
a
personal injury, who charges or
collects from the person any amount in excess of the
reimbursement to the physician
by the insurer as a condition of providing or continuing to
provide services or treatment.
5-37-10.
Annual registration -- Physicians -- Hospitals. -- (a) On Effective
beginning
in calendar year 2004, on or before the first day of March in each year, the
board shall mail an
application for biannual
registration to every person to whom a license to practice medicine in
this state has been granted by the
licensing authority in the state. Every licensed person who
intends to engage in the practice
of his or her profession during the ensuing two (2) year period
shall register his or her license
by submitting to the board on or before June 1 the application
executed together with the
registration form and fee as established by regulation by the director of
the department of health. Upon
receipt of the application and fee the board issues a registration
certificate effective July 1 and
expiring the two (2) years following on June 30, and the
registration certificate renders
the holder a registered practitioner of medicine for that registration
period. Effective beginning in
calendar year 2004, any references in this chapter to annual
registration or annual limited
registration shall be interpreted to mean biannual registration and
biannual limited registration,
respectively.
(b)
The registration certificate of all physicians whose renewals accompanied by
the
prescribed fee are not completed
and filed on or before the first day of July are automatically
lapse. The board may, in its
discretion and upon the payment by the physician of the current
registration fee plus an additional
fee of one hundred dollars ($100), reinstate any certificate
lapsed under the provisions of this
section.
(c)
Hospitals shall, on or before the first day of December of each year, submit an
application and annual fee to the
board as a condition of rendering hospital services in the state.
The form of application and fee are
as the director, by regulation, establishes; provided, that the
ratio of payment between hospital
per bed licensing fees and the combined licensing and board of
medical licensure and discipline
fees paid by physicians remain the same as the ratio that existed
as of January 1, 1987. All fees
collected pursuant to this section are deposited as general
revenues.
SECTION
2. Section 5-37-24 of the General Laws in Chapter 5-37 entitled "Board of
Medical Licensure and
Discipline" is hereby repealed.
5-37-24.
Anesthesiologists -- Notice to patients. -- All
anesthesiologists rendering
elective services to patients
shall notify the patients prior to their admission to the hospital either
in person or through a written
communication containing the anesthesiologist's name, address,
and telephone number (1) whether
the anesthesiologist is a participating member of any third
party payor of medical plan(s);
(2) whether the fee for services to be rendered are covered in full
under Blue Cross/Blue Shield,
Medicare, Plan 65, Medicaid, or other third party payors; and (3)
the method by which the
anesthesiology fee is determined including what factors are taken into
consideration and a range of
costs of anesthesiology for the anesthesiologist's ten (10) most
common medical procedures. A
patient is not be liable for any fees charged which are not
covered by medical plan
coverage, unless notified as stated in this section.
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon
passage.
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LC02065/SUB A
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