Medicine
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Education Law
Article 131-A, Definitions of Professional Misconduct
Applicable to Physicians, Physician's Assistants and
Specialist's Assistants
Each of the following is professional misconduct, and any
licensee found guilty of such misconduct under the procedures
prescribed in section two hundred thirty of the public health law
shall be subject to penalties as prescribed in section two
hundred thirty-a of the public health law except that the charges
may be dismissed in the interest of justice:
- Obtaining the license fraudulently;
- Practicing the profession fraudulently or beyond its
authorized scope;
- Practicing the profession with negligence on more than one
occasion;
- Practicing the profession with gross negligence on a
particular occasion;
- Practicing the profession with incompetence on more than one
occasion;
- Practicing the profession with gross incompetence;
- Practicing the profession while impaired by alcohol, drugs,
physical disability, or mental disability;
- Being a habitual abuser of alcohol, or being dependent on or
a habitual user of narcotics, barbiturates, amphetamines,
hallucinogens, or other drugs having similar effects, except for
a licensee who is maintained on an approved therapeutic regimen
which does not impair the ability to practice, or having a
psychiatric condition which impairs the licensee's ability to
practice;
- (a) Being convicted of committing an act constituting a crime
under:
- New York state law or,
- federal law or,
- the law of another jurisdiction and which, if committed
within this state, would have constituted a crime under New York
state law;
(b) Having been found guilty of improper professional practice or
professional misconduct by a duly authorized professional
disciplinary agency of another state where the conduct upon which
the finding was based would, if committed in New York state,
constitute professional misconduct under the laws of New York
state;
(c) Having been found guilty in an adjudicatory proceeding of
violating a state or federal statute or regulation, pursuant to a
final decision or determination, and when no appeal is pending,
or after resolution of the proceeding by stipulation or
agreement, and when the violation would constitute professional
misconduct pursuant to this section;
(d) Having his or her license to practice medicine revoked,
suspended or having other disciplinary action taken, or having
his or her application for a license refused, revoked or
suspended or having voluntarily or otherwise surrendered his or
her license after a disciplinary action was instituted by a duly
authorized professional disciplinary agency of another state,
where the conduct resulting in the revocation, suspension or
other disciplinary action involving the license or refusal,
revocation or suspension of an application for a license or the
surrender of the license would, if committed in New York state,
constitute professional misconduct under the laws of New York
state;
(e) Having been found by the commissioner of health to be in
violation of article thirty-three of the public health law;
- Refusing to provide professional service to a person because
of such person's race, creed, color or national origin;
- Permitting, aiding or abetting an unlicensed person to
perform activities requiring a license;
- Practicing the profession while the license is suspended or
inactive as defined in subdivision thirteen of section two
hundred thirty of the public health law, or willfully failing to
register or notify the department of education of any change of
name or mailing address, or, if a professional service
corporation, willfully failing to comply with sections fifteen
hundred three and fifteen hundred fourteen of the business
corporation law or, if a university faculty practice corporation
wilfully failing to comply with paragraphs (b), (c) and (d) of
section fifteen hundred three and section fifteen hundred
fourteen of the business corporation law;
- A willful violation by a licensee of subdivision eleven of
section two hundred thirty of the public health law;
- A violation of section twenty-eight hundred three-d or
twentyeight hundred five-k of the public health law; or
- Failure to comply with an order issued pursuant to
subdivision seven, paragraph (a) of subdivision ten, and
subdivision seventeen of section two hundred thirty of the public
health law;
- A willful or grossly negligent failure to comply with
substantial provisions of federal, state, or local laws, rules,
or regulations governing the practice of medicine;
- Exercising undue influence on the patient, including the
promotion of the sale of services, goods, appliances, or drugs in
such manner as to exploit the patient for the financial gain of
the licensee or of a third party;
- Directly or indirectly offering, giving, soliciting, or
receiving or agreeing to receive, any fee or other consideration
to or from a third party for the referral of a patient or in
connection with the performance of professional services;
- Permitting any person to share in the fees for professional
services, other than: a partner, employee, associate in a
professional firm or corporation, professional subcontractor or
consultant authorized to practice medicine, or a legally
authorized trainee practicing under the supervision of a
licensee. This prohibition shall include any arrangement or
agreement whereby the amount received in payment for furnishing
space, facilities, equipment or personnel services used by a
licensee constitutes a percentage of, or is otherwise dependent
upon, the income or receipts of the licensee from such practice,
except as otherwise provided by law with respect to a facility
licensed pursuant to article twenty-eight of the public health
law or article thirteen of the mental hygiene law;
- Conduct in the practice of medicine which evidences moral
unfitness to practice medicine;
- Willfully making or filing a false report, or failing to file
a report required by law or by the department of health or the
education department, or willfully impeding or obstructing such
filing, or inducing another person to do so;
- Failing to make available to a patient, upon request, copies
of documents in the possession or under the control of the
licensee which have been prepared for and paid for by the patient
or client;
- Revealing of personally identifiable facts, data, or
information obtained in a professional capacity without the prior
consent of the patient, except as authorized or required by
law;
- Practicing or offering to practice beyond the scope permitted
by law, or accepting and performing professional responsibilities
which the licensee knows or has reason to know that he or she is
not competent to perform, or performing without adequate
supervision professional services which the licensee is
authorized to perform only under the supervision of a licensed
professional, except in an emergency situation where a
person's life or health is in danger;
- Delegating professional responsibilities to a person when the
licensee delegating such responsibilities knows or has reason to
know that such person is not qualified, by training, by
experience, or by licensure, to perform them;
25-a. With respect to any non-emergency treatment, procedure or
surgery which is expected to involve local or general anesthesia,
failing to disclose to the patient the identities of all
physicians, except medical residents in certified training
programs, podiatrists and dentists, reasonably anticipated to be
actively involved in such treatment, procedure or surgery and to
obtain such patient's informed consent to said
practitioners' participation;
- Performing professional services which have not been duly
authorized by the patient or his or her legal
representative;
- Advertising or soliciting for patronage that is not in the
public interest.
- Advertising or soliciting not in the public interest shall
include, but not be limited to, advertising or soliciting that:
- is false, fraudulent, deceptive, misleading, sensational, or
flamboyant;
- represents intimidation or undue pressure;
- uses testimonials;
- guarantees any service;
- makes any claim relating to professional services or products
or the costs or price therefor which cannot be substantiated by
the licensee, who shall have the burden of proof;
- makes claims of professional superiority which cannot be
substantiated by the licensee, who shall have the burden of
proof; or
- offers bonuses or inducements in any form other than a
discount or reduction in an established fee or price for a
professional service or product.
- The following shall be deemed appropriate means of informing
the public of the availability of professional services:
- informational advertising not contrary to the foregoing
prohibitions; and
- the advertising in a newspaper, periodical or professional
directory or on radio or television of fixed prices, or a stated
range of prices, for specified routine professional services,
provided that if there is an additional charge for related
services which are an integral part of the overall service being
provided by the licensee, the advertisement shall so state, and
provided further that the advertisement indicates the period of
time for which the advertised prices shall be in effect.
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- All licensees placing advertisements shall maintain, or cause
to be maintained, an exact copy of each advertisement,
transcript, tape or video tape thereof as appropriate for the
medium used, for a period of one year after its last appearance.
This copy shall be made available for inspection upon demand of
the department of health;
- A licensee shall not compensate or give anything of value to
representatives of the press, radio, television or other
communications media in anticipation of or in return for
professional publicity in a news item;
- No demonstrations, dramatizations or other portrayals of
professional practice shall be permitted in advertising on radio
or television;
- Failing to respond within thirty days to written
communications from the department of health and to make
available any relevant records with respect to an inquiry or
complaint about the licensee's professional misconduct. The
period of thirty days shall commence on the date when such
communication was delivered personally to the licensee. If the
communication is sent from the department of health by registered
or certified mail, with return receipt requested, to the address
appearing in the last registration, the period of thirty days
shall commence on the date of delivery to the licensee, as
indicated by the return receipt;
- Violating any term of probation or condition or limitation
imposed on the licensee pursuant to section two hundred thirty of
the public health law;
- Abandoning or neglecting a patient under and in need of
immediate professional care, without making reasonable
arrangements for the continuation of such care, or abandoning a
professional employment by a group practice, hospital, clinic or
other health care facility, without reasonable notice and under
circumstances which seriously impair the delivery of professional
care to patients or clients;
- Willfully harassing, abusing, or intimidating a patient
either physically or verbally;
- Failing to maintain a record for each patient which
accurately reflects the evaluation and treatment of the patient,
provided, however, that a physician who transfers an original
mammogram to a medical institution, or to a physician or health
care provider of the patient, or to the patient directly, as
otherwise provided by law, shall have no obligation under this
section to maintain the original or a copy thereof. Unless
otherwise provided by law, all patient records must be retained
for at least six years. Obstetrical records and records of minor
patients must be retained for at least six years, and until one
year after the minor patient reaches the age of eighteen
years;
- Failing to exercise appropriate supervision over persons who
are authorized to practice only under the supervision of the
licensee;
- Guaranteeing that satisfaction or a cure will result from the
performance of professional services;
- Ordering of excessive tests, treatment, or use of treatment
facilities not warranted by the condition of the patient;
- Claiming or using any secret or special method of treatment
which the licensee refused to divulge to the department of
health;
- Failing to wear an identifying badge, which shall be
conspicuously displayed and legible, indicating the
practitioner's name and professional title authorized
pursuant to this chapter, while practicing as an employee or
operator of a hospital, clinic, group practice or
multiprofessional facility, or at a commercial establishment
offering health services to the public;
- Entering into an arrangement or agreement with a pharmacy for
the compounding and/or dispensing of coded or specially marked
prescriptions;
- With respect to all professional practices conducted under an
assumed name, other than facilities licensed pursuant to article
twenty-eight of the public health law or article thirteen of the
mental hygiene law, failing to post conspicuously at the site of
such practice the name and licensure field of all of the
principal professional licensees engaged in the practice at that
site (i.e., principal partners, officers or principal
shareholders);
- Failing to provide access by qualified persons to patient
information in accordance with the standards set forth in section
eighteen of the public health law as added by chapter 497 of the
laws of 1986;
- Knowingly or willfully performing a complete or partial
autopsy on a deceased person without lawful authority;
- Failing to comply with a signed agreement to practice
medicine in New York state in an area designated by the
commissioner of education as having a shortage of physicians or
refusing to repay medical education costs in lieu of such
required service, or failing to comply with any provision of a
written agreement with the state or any municipality within which
the licensee has agreed to provide medical service, or refusing
to repay funds in lieu of such service as consideration of awards
made by the state or any municipality thereof for his or her
professional education in medicine, or failing to comply with any
agreement entered into to aid his or her medical education;
- Failing to complete forms or reports required for the
reimbursement of a patient by a third party. Reasonable fees may
be charged for such forms or reports, but prior payment for the
professional services to which such forms or reports relate may
not be required as a condition for making such forms or reports
available;
- In the practice of psychiatry, (a) any physical contact of a
sexual nature between licensee and patient except the use of
films and/or other audiovisual aids with individuals or groups in
the development of appropriate responses to overcome sexual
dysfunction and (b) in therapy groups, activities which promote
explicit physical sexual contact between group members during
sessions; and
- In the practice of ophthalmology, failing to provide a
patient, upon request, with the patient's prescription
including the name, address, and signature of the prescriber and
the date of the prescription.
- A violation of section two hundred thirty-eight of the public
health law by a professional other than a professional subject to
the provisions of paragraph (f) of subdivision one of section
twenty-eight hundred five-k of the public health law.
- Failure to use scientifically accepted barrier precautions
and infection control practices as established by the department
of health pursuant to section two hundred thirty-a of the public
health law.
- A violation of section two hundred thirty-d of the public health law or the regulations of the commissioner of health enacted thereunder.
Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of this article or
any other provisions of law to the contrary, the license or
registration of a person subject to the provisions of this
article and article one hundred thirty-one-B of this chapter may
be revoked, suspended, or annulled or such person may be subject
to any other penalty provided in section two hundred thirty-a of
the public health law in accordance with the provisions and
procedures of this article for the following:
That any person subject to the above-enumerated articles has
directly or indirectly requested, received or participated in the
division, transference, assignment, rebate, splitting, or
refunding of a fee for, or has directly requested, received or
profited by means of a credit or other valuable consideration as
a commission, discount or gratuity, in connection with the
furnishing of professional care or service, including x-ray
examination and treatment, or for or in connection with the sale,
rental, supplying, or furnishing of clinical laboratory services
or supplies, x-ray laboratory services or supplies, inhalation
therapy service or equipment, ambulance service, hospital or
medical supplies, physiotherapy or other therapeutic service or
equipment, artificial limbs, teeth or eyes, orthopedic or
surgical appliances or supplies, optical appliances, supplies, or
equipment, devices for aid of hearing, drugs, medication, or
medical supplies, or any other goods, services, or supplies
prescribed for medical diagnosis, care, or treatment under this
chapter, except payment, not to exceed thirty-three and one-third
percent of any fee received for x-ray examination, diagnosis, or
treatment, to any hospital furnishing facilities for such
examination, diagnosis, or treatment. Nothing contained in this
section shall prohibit such persons from practicing as partners,
in groups or as a professional corporation or as a university
faculty practice corporation, nor from pooling fees and moneys
received, either by the partnerships, professional corporations,
or university faculty practice corporations or groups by the
individual members thereof, for professional services furnished
by an individual professional member, or employee of such
partnership, corporation, or group, nor shall the professionals
constituting the partnerships, corporations or groups be
prohibited from sharing, dividing, or apportioning the fees and
moneys received by them or by the partnership, corporation, or
group in accordance with a partnership or other agreement;
provided that no such practice as partners, corporations, or
groups, or pooling of fees or moneys received or shared, division
or apportionment of fees shall be permitted with respect to and
treatment under the workers' compensation law. Nothing
contained in this chapter shall prohibit a corporation licensed
pursuant to article forty-three of the insurance law pursuant to
its contract with the subscribed from prorationing a medical or
dental expenses indemnity allowance among two or more
professionals in proportion to the services rendered by each such
professional at the request of the subscriber, provided that
prior to payment thereof such professionals shall submit both to
the corporation licensed pursuant to article forty-three of the
insurance law and to the subscriber statements itemizing the
services rendered by each such professional and the charges
therefor.
The board of professional medical conduct and the department
of health shall enforce, administer and interpret this article.
Before issuing a declaratory ruling pursuant to section two
hundred four of the state administrative procedure act with
respect to this article, the department of health shall fully
consult with the department of education. Neither the
commissioner of education, the board of regents nor the
commissioner of health may promulgate any rules or regulations
concerning this article.
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