2022 -- H 7299 | |
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LC004301 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS - PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Bennett, Kislak, Baginski, Giraldo, S Lima, Solomon, | |
Date Introduced: February 02, 2022 | |
Referred To: House Health & Human Services | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 5-54-2, 5-54-22, 5-54-27 and 5-54-28 of the General Laws in |
2 | Chapter 5-54 entitled "Physician Assistants" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 5-54-2. Definitions. |
4 | As used in this chapter, the following words have the following meanings: |
5 | (1) "Administrator" means the administrator, division of professional regulation. |
6 | (2) "Approved program" means a program for the education and training of physician |
7 | assistants formally approved by the American Medical Association's (A.M.A.'s) Committee on |
8 | Allied Health, Education and Accreditation, its successor, the Commission on Accreditation of |
9 | Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP) or its successor. |
10 | (3) "Approved program for continuing medical education" means a program for continuing |
11 | education approved by the American Academy of Physician Assistants (AAPA) or the |
12 | Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education of the American Medical Association |
13 | (AMA), or the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAPFP) or the American Osteopathic |
14 | Association Committee on Continuing Medical Education (AOACCME) or any other board- |
15 | approved program. |
16 | (4) "Board" means the board of licensure of physician assistants. |
17 | (5) "Collaboration" means the physician assistant shall, as indicated by the patient's |
18 | condition, the education, competencies, and experience of the physician assistant, and the standards |
19 | of care, consult with or refer to an appropriate physician or other healthcare professional. The |
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1 | degree of collaboration shall be determined by the practice and includes decisions made by a |
2 | physician employer in solo practice or, physician medical-practice group practice as defined in § |
3 | 5-37-1, and or the credentialing and privileging systems of a licensed hospital, health center, or |
4 | ambulatory care center health care facility licensed pursuant to the provisions of chapter 17 of title |
5 | 23, or health-maintenance organization licensed pursuant to the provisions of chapter 17 of title 23 |
6 | or chapter 41 of title 27. A physician must be accessible at all times for consultation by the |
7 | physician assistant. |
8 | (6) "Director" means the director of the department of health. |
9 | (7) "Division" means the division of professional regulation, department of health. |
10 | (8) [Deleted by P.L. 2013, ch. 320, § 1 and P.L. 2013, ch. 420, § 1.] |
11 | (9) "Physician" means a person licensed under the provisions of chapter 29 or 37 of this |
12 | title. |
13 | (10) "Physician assistant" or "PA" means a person who is qualified by academic and |
14 | practical training to provide medical and surgical services in collaboration with physicians. |
15 | (11) "Unprofessional conduct" includes, but is not limited to, the following items or any |
16 | combination and may be defined by regulations established by the board with prior approval of the |
17 | director: |
18 | (i) Fraudulent or deceptive procuring or use of a license; |
19 | (ii) Representation of himself or herself as a physician; |
20 | (iii) Conviction of a felony; conviction of a crime arising out of the practice of medicine. |
21 | All advertising of medical business that is intended or has a tendency to deceive the public; |
22 | (iv) Abandonment of a patient; |
23 | (v) Dependence upon a controlled substance, habitual drunkenness, or rendering |
24 | professional services to a patient while intoxicated or incapacitated by the use of drugs; |
25 | (vi) Promotion of the sale of drugs, devices, appliances, or goods or services provided for |
26 | a patient in a manner that exploits the patient for the financial gain of the physician assistant; |
27 | (vii) Immoral conduct of a physician assistant in the practice of medicine; |
28 | (viii) Willfully making and filing false reports or records; |
29 | (ix) Willful omission to file or record or willfully impeding or obstructing a filing or |
30 | recording, or inducing another person to omit to file or record medical or other reports as required |
31 | by law; |
32 | (x) Agreeing with clinical or bioanalytical laboratories to accept payments from these |
33 | laboratories for individual tests or test series for patients; |
34 | (xi) Practicing with an unlicensed physician or physician assistant or aiding or abetting |
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1 | these unlicensed persons in the practice of medicine; |
2 | (xii) Offering, undertaking, or agreeing to cure or treat a disease by a secret method, |
3 | procedure, treatment, or medicine; |
4 | (xiii) Professional or mental incompetence; |
5 | (xiv) Surrender, revocation, suspension, limitation of privilege based on quality of care |
6 | provided, or any other disciplinary action against a license or authorization to practice in another |
7 | state or jurisdiction; or surrender, revocation, suspension, or any other disciplinary action relating |
8 | to membership on any medical staff or in any medical professional association, or society while |
9 | under disciplinary investigation by any of those authorities or bodies for acts or conduct similar to |
10 | acts or conduct that would constitute grounds for action as stated in this chapter; |
11 | (xv) Any adverse judgment, settlement, or award arising from a medical liability claim |
12 | related to acts or conduct that would constitute grounds for action as stated in this chapter; |
13 | (xvi) Failure to furnish the board, the administrator, investigator, or representatives, |
14 | information legally requested by the board; |
15 | (xvii) Violation of any provisions of this chapter or the rules and regulations promulgated |
16 | by the director or an action, stipulation, or agreement of the board; |
17 | (xviii) Cheating or attempting to subvert the certifying examination; |
18 | (xix) Violating any state or federal law or regulation relating to controlled substances; |
19 | (xx) Medical malpractice; |
20 | (xxi) Sexual contact between a physician assistant and patient during the existence of the |
21 | physician assistant/patient relationship; |
22 | (xxii) Providing services to a person who is making a claim as a result of a personal injury, |
23 | who charges or collects from the person any amount in excess of the reimbursement to the physician |
24 | assistant by the insurer as a condition of providing or continuing to provide services or treatment. |
25 | 5-54-22. Continuing medical education. |
26 | Every physician assistant licensed to practice within the state shall be required to have |
27 | satisfactorily completed twenty-five (25) hours of approved continuing medical education |
28 | annually. The annual period for accumulation of continuing-education hours commences on the |
29 | first day of October and runs through the last day of September beginning in 1996. Beginning with |
30 | the annual renewal period commencing the first day of October 1997, the administrator shall not |
31 | renew the certificate of licensure until satisfactory evidence of the completion of the required |
32 | continuing medical education is provided to the division. |
33 | Effective beginning in calendar year 2023, every physician assistant licensed to practice |
34 | within this state shall, in connection with bienniel license renewal, on or before the first day of June |
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1 | in each odd-numbered year, provide satisfactory evidence to the board for physician assistants that |
2 | in the preceding two (2) years the physician assistant has completed fifty (50) hours of approved |
3 | continuing medical education. The board may extend for one six (6) month period these educational |
4 | requirements if the board is satisfied that the applicant has suffered hardship that prevented meeting |
5 | the educational requirement. |
6 | 5-54-27. Participation in disaster and emergency care. |
7 | A person licensed under the provisions of this chapter or members of the same profession |
8 | licensed to practice in other states of the United States or members of the same profession |
9 | credentialed by a federal employer who voluntarily and gratuitously, and other than in the ordinary |
10 | course of his or her employment or practice, renders emergency medical assistance during an |
11 | emergency or a state or local disaster may render such care without collaboration as set forth in § |
12 | 5-54-2(5), or with such supervision collaboration as is available. |
13 | 5-54-28. Participation in charitable and voluntary care. |
14 | A physician assistant licensed in this state, or licensed or authorized to practice in any other |
15 | U.S. jurisdiction, or who is credentialed by a federal employer or meets the licensure requirements |
16 | of his or her requisite federal agency as a physician assistant may volunteer to render such care that |
17 | he or she is able to provide at a children's summer camp or for a public or community event or in a |
18 | licensed ambulatory health center providing free care without collaboration as set forth in §5-54- |
19 | 2(5), or with such collaboration as is available. Such care must be rendered without compensation |
20 | or remuneration. It is the obligation of the physician assistant to assure adequate and appropriate |
21 | professional liability coverage. |
22 | SECTION 2. Section 16-91-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-91 entitled "School and |
23 | Youth Programs Concussion Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
24 | 16-91-3. School district's guidelines to be developed and implemented. |
25 | (a) The department of education and the department of health shall work in concert with |
26 | the Rhode Island Interscholastic League to develop and promulgate guidelines to inform and |
27 | educate coaches, teachers, school nurses, youth athletes, and their parents and/or guardians of the |
28 | nature and risk of concussion and head injury, including continuing to play after concussion or head |
29 | injury. A concussion and head injury information sheet shall be signed and returned by the youth |
30 | athlete and the athlete's parent and/or guardian prior to the youth athlete's return to practice or |
31 | competition. |
32 | (b) School districts are required to use training materials made available by the United |
33 | States Center for Disease Control and Prevention entitled "Heads Up: Concussion in the High |
34 | School Sports/Concussion in Youth Sports" and any updates or amendments thereto, or training |
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1 | materials substantively and substantially similar thereto. The department of education shall post |
2 | training materials made available by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the Rhode |
3 | Island Interscholastic League on its website. All coaches and volunteers involved in a youth sport |
4 | or activity covered by this chapter must complete a training course and a refresher course annually |
5 | thereafter in concussions and traumatic brain injuries. All school nurses must complete a training |
6 | course and an annual refresher course in concussions and traumatic brain injuries. Teachers and |
7 | teachers' aides are strongly encouraged to complete the training course in concussions and traumatic |
8 | brain injuries. Training may consist of videos, classes, and any other generally accepted mode and |
9 | medium of providing information. |
10 | (c) School districts are encouraged to have all student athletes perform baseline |
11 | neuropsychological testing, computerized or otherwise. Parents and/or guardians shall be provided |
12 | with information as to the risk of concussion and/or traumatic brain injuries prior to the start of |
13 | every sport season and they shall sign an acknowledgement as to their receipt of such information. |
14 | (d) A youth athlete, who is suspected of sustaining a concussion or head injury in a practice |
15 | or game, shall be removed from competition at that time. |
16 | (e) A youth athlete, who has been removed from play, may not return to play until the |
17 | athlete is evaluated by a licensed physician, physician assistant or certified registered nurse |
18 | practitioner who may consult with an athletic trainer, all of whom shall be trained in the evaluation |
19 | and management of concussions. The athlete must receive written clearance to return to play from |
20 | that licensed physician, physician assistant or certified nurse practitioner. |
21 | (f) All school districts are encouraged to have an athletic trainer, or similarly trained |
22 | person, at all recreational and athletic events addressed by this statute. |
23 | SECTION 3. Section 16-91.1-3 of the General Laws in Chapter 16-91.1 entitled "The |
24 | Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Act" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
25 | 16-91.1-3. School districts' guidelines to be developed and implemented. |
26 | (a) The department of education and the department of health shall promulgate guidelines |
27 | to inform and educate coaches, teachers, school nurses, youth athletes, and their parents and/or |
28 | guardians about the nature and warning signs of sudden cardiac arrest, including the risks associated |
29 | with continuing to play or practice after experiencing the following symptoms: fainting or seizures |
30 | during exercise, unexplained shortness of breath, chest pains, dizziness, racing heart rate and |
31 | extreme fatigue. |
32 | (b) School districts may use training materials made available at no cost to the school |
33 | district by organizations such as Simon's Fund, Parent Heart Watch, Sudden Arrhythmia Death |
34 | Syndromes Foundation, or training materials substantively and substantially similar thereto. The |
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1 | department of education shall post links to training materials on its website. All coaches and |
2 | volunteers involved in a youth sport program or activity covered by this chapter must complete a |
3 | training course that may be completed online about the nature and warning signs of sudden cardiac |
4 | arrest, including the risks associated with continuing to play or practice after experiencing |
5 | symptoms including: fainting or seizures during exercise, unexplained shortness of breath, chest |
6 | pains, dizziness, racing heart rate and extreme fatigue. Training may consist of videos, classes, and |
7 | any other generally accepted mode and medium of providing information. |
8 | (c) Parents and/or guardians shall be provided with information as to the nature and |
9 | warning signs of sudden cardiac arrest prior to the start of every sport season. |
10 | (d)(1) A student who, as determined by a game official, coach from the student's team, |
11 | certified athletic trainer, licensed physician, physician assistant, certified nurse practitioner, or other |
12 | official designated by the student's school entity, exhibits signs or symptoms of sudden cardiac |
13 | arrest while participating in an athletic activity shall be removed by the coach from participation at |
14 | that time, subject to subsection (d)(3) of this section. |
15 | (2) If a student is known to have exhibited signs or symptoms of sudden cardiac arrest at |
16 | any time prior to or following an athletic activity, the student shall be prevented from participating |
17 | in an athletic activity, subject to subsection (d)(3) of this section. |
18 | (3) A student removed or prevented from participating in an athletic activity under |
19 | subsections (d)(1) or (d)(2) of this section shall not return to participation until the student is |
20 | evaluated and cleared for return to participation in writing by a licensed physician, physician |
21 | assistant, or certified registered nurse practitioner, or cardiologist. |
22 | (e) All school districts are encouraged to have an athletic trainer, or similarly trained |
23 | person, at all recreational and athletic events addressed by this statute. |
24 | SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS - PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS | |
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1 | This act would change the definition of collaboration as it pertains to physician assistants. |
2 | Also, this act would change the continuing medical education requirements for physician assistants |
3 | from twenty-five (25) to fifty (50) hours of continuing medical education. Additionally, this act |
4 | would allow physician assistants and nurse practitioners to evaluate youth who are removed from |
5 | athletic play within the School and Youth Concussion Act. |
6 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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