| Chapter 095 |
| 2026 -- S 3184 SUBSTITUTE B Enacted 06/18/2026 |
| A N A C T |
| RELATING TO BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS -- NURSES |
Introduced By: Senators Ciccone, Burke, Famiglietti, Raptakis, and Tikoian |
| Date Introduced: April 03, 2026 |
| It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: |
| SECTION 1. Chapter 5-34 of the General Laws entitled "Nurses" is hereby amended by |
| adding thereto the following section: |
| 5-34-3.1. Administration of deep sedation and general anesthesia. |
| (a) Applicability. |
| This section applies solely to nursing practice authority arising under chapters 34 and 34.2 |
| of title 5 and shall not be construed to regulate, restrict, define, expand, diminish, supersede, or |
| otherwise affect the scope of practice, licensure authority, delegated authority, credentialing, |
| privileging, supervision, or lawful professional activities of any healthcare professional licensed |
| under any other chapter of title 5. |
| (b) Nursing limitations relating to elective deep sedation and general anesthesia. |
| (1) A registered nurse or nurse practitioner who is not licensed as a certified registered |
| nurse anesthetist pursuant to chapter 34.2 of title 5 shall not administer, initiate, titrate, bolus, or |
| maintain medications classified as general anesthetics for inducing or maintaining procedural deep |
| sedation or general anesthesia for elective, scheduled, non-emergent procedures outside of |
| emergency, urgent, resuscitative, trauma, critical care, or urgent bedside procedural circumstances |
| where delay would materially risk patient health or safety. |
| (2) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a registered nurse enrolled as a |
| bona fide student in a nurse anesthesia program approved by the Council on Accreditation of Nurse |
| Anesthesia Educational Programs (COA), or its successors or predecessors, from participating in |
| the administration of deep sedation or general anesthesia when acting under the supervision of a |
| certified registered nurse anesthetist or anesthesiologist |
| (c) Moderate sedation and sedation continuum protections. |
| (1) Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a registered nurse or nurse |
| practitioner from participating in or administering minimal sedation or moderate sedation |
| consistent with lawful scope of practice, credentialing, institutional privileges, professional |
| standards, and facility policies; |
| (2) The general assembly recognizes that sedation exists along a clinical continuum and |
| that patients may transition between levels of sedation despite the practitioner’s intended sedation |
| target. |
| (3) Moderate sedation shall include the clinical practice of initiating, administering, and |
| titrating sedative medications in response to patient condition and procedural needs, including |
| circumstances in which a patient transiently or unplanned enters a deep sedation; provided, |
| however, that nothing in this subsection shall be construed to authorize conduct prohibited by |
| subsection (b)(1) of this section. |
| (4) A transient or unplanned progression to a deep sedation during lawful moderate |
| sedation practice shall not, standing alone, constitute the unlawful administration of elective deep |
| sedation or general anesthesia under this section. |
| (d) Definitions. |
| For purposes of this section, the terms “minimal sedation,” “moderate sedation,” “deep |
| sedation” and “general anesthesia” shall have the meanings and clinical interpretations assigned to |
| those terms under applicable Joint Commission standards governing the provision of sedation and |
| anesthesia services. |
| (e) Construction. |
| (1) Nothing in this section shall be interpreted, construed, or applied to: |
| (i) Narrow, diminish, supersede, amend, redefine, impair, or otherwise affect the scope of |
| practice, licensure authority, delegated authority, clinical authority, credentialing authority, |
| privileging authority, supervision authority, or lawful professional activities of any healthcare |
| professional licensed under any chapter of title 5 other than chapters 34 and 34.2; |
| (ii) Restrict emergency stabilization obligations under state or federal law; |
| (iii) Prevent hospitals or licensed healthcare facilities from establishing additional |
| credentialing, privileging, supervision, staffing, patient safety, or clinical practice requirements; |
| (iv) Create any negative inference regarding the preexisting lawful authority of licensed |
| clinicians to administer sedating medications within applicable scope of practice, delegated |
| authority, institutional privileges, or facility policies; or |
| (v) Amend, limit, supersede, expand, or otherwise alter the licensure authority, scope of |
| practice, credentialing authority or professional practice standards applicable to certified registered |
| nurse anesthetists under chapter 34.2 of title 5. |
| (2) Nothing in this section shall permit facility credentialing, privileging, delegated |
| authority, standing orders, supervision arrangements, protocols, policies, or medical staff bylaws |
| to authorize a registered nurse or non-CRNA nurse practitioners to engage in conduct prohibited |
| by subsection (b) of this section. |
| (3) This section and chapter 34.2 of title 5 shall be construed harmoniously so as to preserve |
| the lawful authority of certified registered nurse anesthetists while clarifying limitations applicable |
| to nursing practice under this chapter. |
| (f) The department of health shall promulgate rules and regulations necessary to implement |
| the provisions of this section no later than January 31, 2027, and shall report to the general assembly |
| regarding implementation issues, including but not limited to access to care, workforce shortages, |
| procedural delays, cancelled elective procedures, patient safety considerations, operational impacts |
| on hospitals and healthcare facilities, and all reportable patient incidents no later than January 31, |
| 2028. Pursuant to § 23-17-40(f)(15) a reportable incident includes an unplanned progression to |
| deep sedation or general anesthesia resulting in the insertion of a supraglottic airway, endotracheal |
| intubation, unplanned hospital admission, transfer to a high level of care, cardiac arrest, permanent |
| neurologic injury or death, excluding certified registered nurse anesthetists, physicians privileged |
| in procedural sedation and all physicians in the specialties of emergency medicine, anesthesiology, |
| and critical care. |
| SECTION 2. Section 23-17-40 of the General Laws in Chapter 23-17 entitled "Licensing |
| of Healthcare Facilities" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
| 23-17-40. Hospital and freestanding emergency-care facility events reporting. |
| (a) Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms shall have the following |
| meanings: |
| (1) “Adverse event” means injury to a patient resulting from a medical intervention, and |
| not to the underlying condition of the patient. |
| (2) “Checklist of care” means predetermined steps to be followed by a team of healthcare |
| providers before, during, or after a given procedure to decrease the possibility of adverse effects |
| and other patient harm by articulating standards of care. |
| (b) Reportable events as defined in subsection (c) of this section shall be reported to the |
| department of health division of facilities regulation on a telephone number maintained for that |
| purpose. Hospitals and freestanding emergency-care facilities shall report incidents as defined in |
| subsection (c) of this section within twenty-four (24) hours of when the accident occurred or, if |
| later, within twenty-four (24) hours of receipt of information causing the hospital or freestanding |
| emergency-care facility to believe that a reportable event has occurred. |
| (c) Reportable events are defined as follows: |
| (1) Fires or internal disasters in the facility that disrupt the provisions of patient-care |
| services or cause harm to patients or personnel; |
| (2) Poisoning involving patients of the facility; |
| (3) Infection outbreaks as defined by the department in regulation; |
| (4) Kidnapping and inpatient psychiatric elopements and elopements by minors; |
| (5) Strikes by personnel; |
| (6) Disasters or other emergency situations external to the hospital or freestanding |
| emergency-care facility environment that adversely affect facility operations; and |
| (7) Unscheduled termination of any services vital to the continued safe operation of the |
| facility or to the health and safety of its patients and personnel. |
| (d) Any hospital or freestanding emergency-care facility filing a report with the attorney |
| general’s office concerning abuse, neglect, and mistreatment of patients, as defined in chapter 17.8 |
| of this title, shall forward a copy of the report to the department of health. In addition, a copy of all |
| hospital notifications and reports made in compliance with the federal Safe Medical Devices Act |
| of 1990, 21 U.S.C. § 301 et seq., shall be forwarded to the department of health within the time |
| specified in the federal law. |
| (e) Any reportable incident in a hospital that results in patient injury, as defined in |
| subsection (f) of this section, shall be reported to the department of health with seventy-two (72) |
| hours or when the hospital has reasonable cause to believe that an incident, as defined in subsection |
| (f) of this section, has occurred. The department of health shall promulgate rules and regulations to |
| include the process whereby healthcare professionals with knowledge of an incident shall report it |
| to the hospital; requirements for the hospital to conduct a root-cause analysis of the incident or |
| other appropriate process for incident investigation and to develop and file a performance- |
| improvement plan; and additional incidents to be reported that are in addition to those listed in |
| subsection (f) of this section. In its reports, no personal identifiers shall be included. The hospital |
| shall require the appropriate committee within the hospital to carry out a peer-review process to |
| determine whether the incident was within the normal range of outcomes, given the patient’s |
| condition. The hospital shall notify the department of the outcome of the internal review, and if the |
| findings determine that the incident was within the normal range of patient outcomes, no further |
| action is required. If the findings conclude that the incident was not within the normal range of |
| patient outcomes, the hospital shall conduct a root-cause analysis or other appropriate process for |
| incident investigation to identify causal factors that may have lead to the incident and develop a |
| performance-improvement plan to prevent similar incidents from occurring in the future. The |
| hospital shall also provide to the department of health the following information: |
| (1) An explanation of the circumstances surrounding the incident; |
| (2) An updated assessment of the effect of the incident on the patient; |
| (3) A summary of current patient status, including follow-up care provided and post- |
| incident diagnosis; and |
| (4) A summary of all actions taken to correct identified problems to prevent recurrence of |
| the incident and/or to improve overall patient care and to comply with other requirements of this |
| section. |
| (f) Incidents to be reported are those causing or involving: |
| (1) Brain injury; |
| (2) Mental impairment; |
| (3) Paraplegia; |
| (4) Quadriplegia; |
| (5) Any type of paralysis; |
| (6) Loss of use of limb or organ; |
| (7) Hospital stay extended due to serious or unforeseen complications; |
| (8) Birth injury; |
| (9) Impairment of sight or hearing; |
| (10) Surgery on the wrong patient; |
| (11) Subjecting a patient to a procedure other than that ordered or intended by the patient’s |
| attending physician; |
| (12) Any other incident that is reported to their malpractice insurance carrier or self- |
| insurance program; |
| (13) Suicide of a patient during treatment or within five (5) days of discharge from an |
| inpatient or outpatient unit (if known); |
| (14) Blood transfusion error; and |
| (15) An unplanned progression to deep sedation or general anesthesia resulting in the |
| insertion of a supraglottic airway, endotracheal intubation, unplanned hospital admission, transfer |
| to a higher level of care, cardiac arrest, permanent neurologic injury or death, excluding certified |
| registered nurse anesthetists, physicians privileged in procedural sedation and all physicians in the |
| specialties of emergency medicine, anesthesiology, and critical care; and |
| (15)(16) Any serious or unforeseen complication, that is not expected or probable, resulting |
| in an extended hospital stay or death of the patient. |
| (g) This section does not replace other reporting required by this chapter. |
| (h) Nothing in this section shall prohibit the department from investigating any event or |
| incident. |
| (i) All reports to the department under this section shall be subject to the provisions of § |
| 23-17-15. In addition, all reports under this section, together with the peer-review records and |
| proceedings related to events and incidents so reported and the participants in the proceedings, shall |
| be deemed entitled to all the privileges and immunities for peer-review records set forth in § 23- |
| 17-25. |
| (j) The department shall issue an annual report by March 31 each year providing aggregate, |
| summary information on the events and incidents reported by hospitals and freestanding |
| emergency-care facilities as required by this chapter. A copy of the report shall be forwarded to the |
| governor, the speaker of the house, the senate president, and members of the health care quality |
| steering committee established pursuant to § 23-17.17-6. |
| (k) The director shall review the list of incidents to be reported in subsection (f) at least |
| biennially to ascertain whether any additions, deletions, or modifications to the list are necessary. |
| In conducting the review, the director shall take into account those adverse events identified on the |
| National Quality Forum’s List of Serious Reportable Events. In the event the director determines |
| that incidents should be added, deleted, or modified, the director shall make such recommendations |
| for changes to the legislature. |
| SECTION 3. This act shall take on January 1, 2027. |
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| LC006266/SUB B |
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