REFERENCE TITLE: assistant physicians;
licensure; collaborative practice |
State of
Arizona House of
Representatives Fifty-fourth
Legislature Second Regular
Session 2020 |
HB 2419 |
|
Introduced by Representative Barto |
AN ACT
amending section
32-1422, Arizona Revised Statutes; Amending title 32, chapter 13, article 2,
Arizona Revised Statutes, by adding section 32‑1432.04; amending title
32, chapter 13, article 3, Arizona Revised Statutes, by adding section 32‑1459;
relating to the Arizona medical board.
(TEXT OF BILL BEGINS ON NEXT PAGE)
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Arizona:
Section 1. Section 32-1422, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended to read:
32-1422. Basic requirements for granting a license to practice medicine; credentials verification
A. An applicant for a license to practice medicine in this state pursuant to this article shall meet each of the following basic requirements:
1. Graduate from an approved school of medicine or receive a medical education that the board deems to be of equivalent quality.
2. Except as provided in section 32‑1432.04, successfully complete an approved twelve-month hospital internship, residency or clinical fellowship program.
3. Have the physical and mental capability to safely engage in the practice of medicine.
4. Have a professional record that indicates that the applicant has not committed any act or engaged in any conduct that would constitute grounds for disciplinary action against a licensee under this chapter.
5. Not have had a license to practice medicine revoked by a medical regulatory board in another jurisdiction in the United States for an act that occurred in that jurisdiction that constitutes unprofessional conduct pursuant to this chapter.
6. Not be currently under investigation, suspension or restriction by a medical regulatory board in another jurisdiction in the United States for an act that occurred in that jurisdiction and that constitutes unprofessional conduct pursuant to this chapter. If the applicant is under investigation by a medical regulatory board in another jurisdiction, the board shall suspend the application process and may not issue or deny a license to the applicant until the investigation is resolved.
7. Not have surrendered a license to practice medicine in lieu of disciplinary action by a medical regulatory board in another jurisdiction in the United States for an act that occurred in that jurisdiction and that constitutes unprofessional conduct pursuant to this chapter.
8. Pay all fees required by the board.
9. Complete the application as required by the board.
10. Complete a training unit as prescribed by the board relating to the requirements of this chapter and board rules. The applicant shall submit proof with the application form of having completed the training unit.
11. Have submitted directly to the board, electronically or by hard copy, verification of the following:
(a) Licensure from every state in which the applicant has ever held a medical license.
(b) All medical employment for the five years preceding application. If the applicant is employed by a hospital or medical group or organization, the board shall accept the confirmation required under this subdivision from the applicant's employer. For the purposes of this subdivision, "medical employment" includes all medical professional activities.
12. Have submitted a full set of fingerprints to the board for the purpose of obtaining a state and federal criminal records check pursuant to section 41‑1750 and Public Law 92‑544. The department of public safety may exchange this fingerprint data with the federal bureau of investigation.
B. The board may require the submission of credentials or other evidence, written and oral, and make any investigation it deems necessary to adequately inform itself with respect to an applicant's ability to meet the requirements prescribed by this section, including a requirement that the applicant for licensure undergo a physical examination, a mental evaluation and an oral competence examination and interview, or any combination thereof, as the board deems proper.
C. In determining if the requirements of subsection A, paragraph 4 of this section have been met, if the board finds that the applicant committed an act or engaged in conduct that would constitute grounds for disciplinary action, the board shall determine to its satisfaction that the conduct has been corrected, monitored and resolved. If the matter has not been resolved, the board shall determine to its satisfaction that mitigating circumstances exist that prevent its resolution.
D. In determining if the requirements of subsection A, paragraph 6 of this section have been met, if another jurisdiction has taken disciplinary action against an applicant, the board shall determine to its satisfaction that the cause for the action was corrected and the matter resolved. If the matter has not been resolved by that jurisdiction, the board shall determine to its satisfaction that mitigating circumstances exist that prevent its resolution.
E. The board may delegate authority to the executive director to deny licenses if applicants do not meet the requirements of this section.
F. Any credential information required to be submitted to the board pursuant to this article must be submitted, electronically or by hard copy, from the primary source where the document or information originated, except that the board may accept primary-source verified credentials from a credentials verification service approved by the board. The board is not required to verify any documentation or information received by the board from a credentials verification service that has been approved by the board. If an applicant is unable to provide a document or information from the primary source due to no fault of the applicant, the executive director shall forward the issue to the full board for review and determination. The board shall adopt rules establishing the criteria that must be met in order to waive a documentation requirement of this article.
Sec. 2. Title 32, chapter 13, article 2, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended by adding section 32-1432.04, to read:
32-1432.04. Assistant
physicians; licensure; applications; rules; definitions
A. An assistant physician may
practice as an assistant physician as follows:
1. By providing only primary care
services and only in medically underserved rural or urban areas of this state.
2. Under the terms of an assistant
physician collaborative practice agreement.
B. For a physician‑assistant
physician team working in a rural health clinic under the rural health clinic
services act of 1977 (P.L. 95‑210), as amended:
1. An assistant physician shall be considered a
physician assistant for purposes of centers for medicare and medicaid services
regulations.
2. Supervision requirements in
addition to the minimum federal supervision requirement are not required.
C. For the purposes of this section,
the board shall establish rules, pursuant to title 41, chapter 6, that provide
for all of the following:
1. Licensure and license renewal
procedures.
2. Physician supervision and
collaborative practice arrangements.
3. Fees.
4. Any other matters that are
necessary to protect the public and discipline professionals.
D. An application for licensure may
be denied or the licensure of an assistant physician may be suspended or
revoked by the board in the same manner and for violation of the standards
prescribed by section 32‑1451, or such other standards of conduct
prescribed by the board by rule. An
assistant physician may not be required to complete more hours of continuing
medical education than that of a licensed physician.
E. An assistant physician shall
clearly identify himself or herself as an assistant physician and may use the
terms "doctor", "Dr.", or "doc". An assistant physician may not practice or
attempt to practice without an assistant physician collaborative practice
arrangement as prescribed in section 32‑1459, except as otherwise
provided in this section and in an emergency situation.
F. The
collaborating physician is responsible at all times for the oversight of the
activities of and accepts responsibility for primary care services rendered by
the assistant physician.
G. An
assistant physician's license renewal shall include verification of actual practice
under a collaborative practice arrangement as prescribed in section 32‑1459
during the immediately preceding licensure period.
H. Each
health insurance carrier or health benefit plan that offers or issues health
benefit plans that are delivered, issued for delivery, continued or renewed in
this state shall reimburse an assistant physician for diagnosing, consulting or
treating an insured or enrollee on the same basis that the health carrier or
health benefit plan covers the service when it is delivered by another
comparable mid‑level health care provider, including a physician
assistant.
I. For the purposes of this section:
1. "Assistant
physician" means a medical school graduate who meets all of the following:
(a) Is a resident and
citizen of the United States or is a legal resident alien.
(b) Has either:
(i) Successfully completed
step two of the United States medical licensing examination or the equivalent
of such a step of any other board‑approved medical licensing examination
within the three‑year period immediately preceding application for
licensure as an assistant physician, or within three years after graduation
from a medical college or osteopathic medical college, whichever is later.
(ii) Not completed an
approved postgraduate residency and has successfully completed step two of the
United States medical licensing examination or the equivalent of such a step of
any other board‑approved medical licensing examination within the
immediately preceding three‑year period unless, when the three‑year
anniversary occurred, the person was serving as a resident physician in an
accredited residency in the United States and continued to do so within thirty
days before applying for licensure as an assistant physician.
(c) Is proficient in the
English language.
2. "Collaborative
practice arrangement" means an agreement between a physician and an
assistant physician that meets the requirements of this section and section 32‑1459.
3. "Medical school graduate" means a person who has graduated from a medical college or osteopathic medical college described in section 32‑1422.
Sec. 3. Title 32, chapter 13, article 3, Arizona Revised Statutes, is amended by adding section 32-1459, to read:
32-1459. Assistant physicians;
collaborative practice agreements; requirements; rules; controlled substances;
definitions
A. A physician may enter into collaborative practice
arrangements with assistant physicians.
Collaborative practice arrangements shall be in the form of written
agreements, jointly agreed‑on protocols or standing orders for the
delivery of health care services.
Collaborative practice arrangements:
1. Shall
be in writing.
2. May
delegate to an assistant physician the authority to administer or dispense
drugs under the authority provided by and conditions of section 32‑1491.
3. Shall
allow the assistant physician to provide treatment as long as the delivery of
the health care services is within the scope of practice of the assistant
physician and is consistent with that assistant physician's skill, training and
competence and the skill and training of the collaborating physician.
B. The
collaborative practice arrangement shall contain at least the following
provisions:
1. Complete
names, home and business addresses, zip codes and telephone numbers of the
collaborating physician and the assistant physician.
2. A
list of all other offices or locations besides those listed in paragraph 1 of
this subsection where the collaborating physician authorizes the assistant
physician to prescribe.
3. A
requirement that there be posted at every office where the assistant physician
is authorized to prescribe, in collaboration with a physician, a prominently
displayed disclosure statement informing patients that they may be seen by an
assistant physician and have the right to see the collaborating physician.
4. All
specialty or board certifications of the collaborating physician and all certifications
of the assistant physician.
5. The
manner of collaboration between the collaborating physician and the assistant
physician, including how the collaborating physician and the assistant
physician will:
(a) Engage in
collaborative practice consistent with each professional's skill, training,
education and competence.
(b) Maintain geographic
proximity, except that the collaborative practice arrangement may allow for
geographic proximity to be waived for a maximum of twenty‑eight days per
calendar year for rural health clinics as defined by 42 United States code
section 1395x, as long
as the collaborative practice arrangement includes alternative coverage as
required by subdivision (c)
of this paragraph. The geographic proximity exception applies only
to independent rural health clinics, provider‑based rural health clinics
if the provider is a critical access hospital as provided in 42 United States
code section 1395i‑4
or provider‑based rural health clinics if the main location of the
hospital sponsor is more than fifty miles from the clinic. The collaborating physician shall maintain
documentation related to this requirement and present it to the board on
request.
(c) Provide for
alternative coverage during absence, incapacity or infirmity or an emergency.
6. A
description of the assistant physician's controlled substance prescriptive
authority in collaboration with the physician, including a list of the
controlled substances the collaborating physician authorizes the assistant
physician to prescribe and documentation that it is consistent with each
professional's education, knowledge, skill and competence.
7. A
list of any other written practice agreement of the collaborating physician and
the assistant physician.
8. The
duration of any other written practice agreement between the collaborating
physician and the assistant physician.
9. A
description of the time and manner of the collaborating physician's review of
the assistant physician's delivery of health care services, including provisions
that the assistant physician must submit a minimum of ten percent of the charts
documenting the assistant physician's delivery of health care services to the
collaborating physician for review by the collaborating physician, or any other
physician designated in the collaborative practice arrangement, every fourteen
days.
10. A
requirement that the collaborating physician, or any other physician designated
in the collaborative practice arrangement, review every fourteen days a minimum
of twenty percent of the charts in which the assistant physician prescribes
controlled substances. The charts
reviewed under this paragraph may be counted in the number of charts required
to be reviewed under paragraph 9 of this subsection.
C. The
board shall adopt rules, pursuant to title 41, chapter 6, regulating the use of
collaborative practice arrangements for assistant physicians that specify:
1. Geographic
areas to be covered.
2. The
methods of treatment that may be covered by collaborative practice
arrangements.
3. In
conjunction with deans of medical schools and primary care residency program
directors in this state, the development and implementation of educational
methods and programs undertaken during the collaborative practice service that
facilitates the advancement of the assistant physician's medical knowledge and
capabilities and that may lead to credit toward a future residency program for
programs that deem such documented educational achievements acceptable.
4. The
requirements for review of services provided under collaborative practice
arrangements, including delegating authority to prescribe controlled
substances.
D. The
board shall adopt rules applicable to assistant physicians that are consistent
with guidelines for federally funded clinics.
The rulemaking authority granted in this subsection does not extend to
collaborative practice arrangements of hospital employees providing inpatient
care within accredited hospitals as defined in section 36‑401.
E. The
board may not deny, revoke, suspend or otherwise take disciplinary action
against the license of a collaborating physician for health care services
delegated to an assistant physician if this section and the rules adopted
pursuant to this section are satisfied.
F. the
board shall require each physician, on licensure renewal, to identify whether
the physician is engaged in any collaborative practice arrangement, including
collaborative practice arrangements delegating the authority to prescribe
controlled substances, and to report to the board the name of each assistant
physician with whom the physician has such an arrangement. The board may make such information available
to the public. The board shall track the
reported information and may routinely conduct random reviews of the
collaborative practice arrangements to ensure they are carried out in
compliance with this chapter and the rules adopted pursuant to this chapter.
G. A
collaborating physician may not enter into a collaborative practice arrangement
with more than six full‑time equivalent assistant physicians or full‑time
equivalent physician assistants, or any combination thereof.
H. The
collaborating physician shall determine and document the completion of at least
a one‑month period of time during which the assistant physician practices
in a setting in which the collaborating physician is continuously present
before practicing when the collaborating physician is not continuously
present. Board rules may not require the
collaborating physician to review more than ten percent of the assistant
physician's patient charts or records during that one‑month period.
I. A
collaborative practice arrangement under this section may not supersede current
hospital licensing regulations governing hospital medication orders under protocols
or standing orders for the purpose of delivering inpatient or emergency care
within an accredited hospital as defined in section 36‑401 if such
protocols or standing orders have been approved by the hospital's medical staff
and pharmaceutical therapeutics committee.
J. A
contract or other agreement may not require a physician to act as a
collaborating physician for an assistant physician against the physician's
will. A physician may refuse to act as a collaborating physician,
without penalty, for a particular assistant physician. A contract or other agreement may not limit
the collaborating physician's ultimate authority over any protocols or standing
orders or in delegating the physician's authority to any assistant physician,
and a physician, in implementing such protocols, standing orders or delegation,
may not violate applicable standards for safe medical practice established by a
hospital's medical staff.
K. A
contract or other agreement may not require any assistant physician to serve as
a collaborating assistant physician for any collaborating physician against the
assistant physician's will. An assistant physician may refuse to
collaborate, without penalty, with a particular physician.
L. All
collaborating physicians and assistant physicians in collaborative practice
arrangements shall wear identification badges while acting within the scope of
their collaborative practice arrangement.
The identification badges shall prominently display the licensure status
of each collaborating physician and assistant physician.
M. An
assistant physician who is granted controlled substances prescriptive authority
as provided in this chapter may prescribe any controlled substance listed in
schedule III, IV or V, and may have restricted authority in schedule II, when
delegated the authority to prescribe controlled substances in a collaborative
practice arrangement. Prescriptions for
schedule II medications prescribed by an assistant physician who has a
certificate of controlled substances prescriptive authority are restricted to
only those medications containing hydrocodone.
Such authority shall be filed with the board. The collaborating physician may limit a
specific scheduled drug or scheduled drug category that the assistant physician
is allowed to prescribe. Any limits
shall be listed in the collaborative practice arrangement. Assistant physicians may not prescribe
controlled substances for themselves or members of their families. Schedule III controlled substances and
schedule II hydrocodone prescriptions are limited to a five‑day supply
without refill, except that buprenorphine may be prescribed for up to a thirty‑day
supply without refill for patients receiving medication‑assisted
treatment for substance use disorders under the direction of the collaborating
physician. Assistant physicians who are
authorized to prescribe controlled substances under this chapter shall register
with the United States drug enforcement administration and shall include the
United States drug enforcement administration registration number on
prescriptions for controlled substances. The collaborating physician shall
determine and document the completion of at least one hundred twenty hours in a
four‑month period by the assistant physician during which the assistant
physician practices with the collaborating physician on‑site before
prescribing controlled substances when the collaborating physician is not on‑site.
N. This
section and section 32‑1432.04 do not limit the authority of hospitals or
hospital medical staff to make employment or medical staff credentialing or
privileging decisions.
O. For the purposes of this section, "assistant physician" and "collaborative practice arrangement" have the same meanings prescribed in section 32-1432.04.