Medicine
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Education Law
Article 131, Medicine
This article applies to the profession of medicine. The
general provisions for all professions contained in article one
hundred thirty of this title apply to this article.
The practice of the profession of medicine is defined as
diagnosing, treating, operating or prescribing for any human
disease, pain, injury, deformity or physical condition.
Only a person licensed or otherwise authorized under this
article shall practice medicine or use the title
"physician".
A state board for medicine shall be appointed by the board of
regents on recommendation of the commissioner for the purpose of
assisting the board of regents and the department on matters of
professional licensing in accordance with section sixty-five
hundred eight of this title. The board shall be composed of not
less than twenty physicians licensed in this state for at least
five years, two of whom shall be doctors of osteopathy. The board
shall also consist of not less than two physician's
assistants licensed to practice in this state. The participation
of physician's assistant members shall be limited to matters
relating to article one hundred thirty-one-B of this chapter. An
executive secretary to the board shall be appointed by the board
of regents on recommendation of the commissioner and shall be
either a physician licensed in this state or a non-physician,
deemed qualified by the commissioner and board of regents.
To qualify for a license as a physician, an applicant shall
fulfill the following requirements:
- Application: file an application with the department;
- Education: have received an education, including a degree of
doctor of medicine, "M.D.", or doctor of osteopathy,
"D.O.", or equivalent degree in accordance with the
commissioner's regulations;
- Experience: have experience satisfactory to the board and in
accordance with the commissioner's regulations;
- Examination: pass an examination satisfactory to the board
and in accordance with the commissioner's regulations;
- Age: be at least twenty-one years of age; however, the
commissioner may waive the age requirement for applicants who
have attained the age of eighteen and will be in a residency
program until the age of twenty-one;
- Citizenship or immigration status: be a United States citizen
or an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence in the
United States; provided, however that the board of regents may
grant a three year waiver for an alien physician to practice in
an area which has been designated by the department as medically
underserved, except that the board of regents may grant an
additional extension not to exceed six years to an alien
physician to enable him or her to secure citizenship or permanent
resident status, provided such status is being actively
pursued;
- Character: be of good moral character as determined by the
department; and
- Fees: pay a fee of two hundred sixty dollars to the
department for admission to a department conducted examination
and for an initial license, a fee of one hundred seventy-five
dollars for each reexamination, a fee of one hundred thirty-five
dollars for an initial license for persons not requiring
admission to a department conducted examination, a fee of five
hundred seventy dollars for any biennial registration period
commencing August first, nineteen hundred ninety-six and
thereafter. The comptroller is hereby authorized and directed to
deposit the fee for each biennial registration period into the
special revenue funds-other entitled "professional medical
conduct account" for the purpose of offsetting any
expenditures made pursuant to section two hundred thirty of the
public health law in relation to the operation of the office of
professional medical conduct within the department of health. The
amount of the funds expended as a result of such increase shall
not be greater than such fees collected over the registration
period.
- For every license or registration issued after the effective
date of this subdivision, an additional fee of thirty dollars
shall be paid and deposited in the special revenue fund entitled
"the professional medical conduct account" for the
purpose of offsetting any expenditures made pursuant to
subdivision fifteen of section two hundred thirty of the public
health law. The amount of such funds expended for such purpose
shall not be greater than such additional fees collected over the
licensure period or for the duration of such program if less than
the licensure period.
- A physician shall not be required to pay any fee under this section if he or she certifies to the department that for the period of registration or licensure, he or she shall only practice medicine without compensation or the expectation or promise of compensation. The following shall not be considered compensation for the purposes of this subdivision: (a) nominal payment solely to enable the physician to be considered an employee of a health care provider, or (b) providing liability coverage to the physician relating to the services provided.
Permits limited as to eligibility, practice and duration,
shall be issued by the department to eligible applicants, as
follows:
- Eligibility: The following persons shall be eligible for a
limited permit:
- (1) A person who fulfills all
requirements for a license as a physician except those relating
to the examination and citizenship or permanent residence in the
United States;
- (2) A foreign physician who
holds a standard certificate from the educational council for
foreign medical graduates or who has passed an examination
satisfactory to the state board for medicine and in accordance
with the commissioner's regulations; or
- (3) A foreign physician or a
foreign intern who is in this country on a non-immigration visa
for the continuation of medical study, pursuant to the exchange
student program of the United States department of state.
- Limit of practice. A permittee shall be authorized to
practice medicine only under the supervision of a licensed
physician and only in a public, voluntary, or proprietary
hospital.
- Duration. A limited permit shall be valid for two years. It
may be renewed biennially at the discretion of the
department.
- Fees. The fee for each limited permit and for each renewal
shall be one hundred five dollars.
The following persons under the following limitations may
practice medicine within the state without a license:
- Any physician who is employed as a resident in a public
hospital, provided such practice is limited to such hospital and
is under the supervision of a licensed physician;
- Any physician who is licensed in a bordering state and who
resides near a border of this state, provided such practice is
limited in this state to the vicinity of such border and provided
such physician does not maintain an office or place to meet
patients or receive calls within this state;
- Any physician who is licensed in another state or country and
who is meeting a physician licensed in this state, for purposes
of consultation, provided such practice is limited to such
consultation;
- Any physician who is licensed in another state or country,
who is visiting a medical school or teaching hospital in this
state to receive medical instruction for a period not to exceed
six months or to conduct medical instruction, provided such
practice is limited to such instruction and is under the
supervision of a licensed physician;
- Any physician who is authorized by a foreign government to
practice in relation to its diplomatic, consular or maritime
staffs, provided such practice is limited to such staffs;
- Any commissioned medical officer who is serving in the United
States armed forces or public health service or any physician who
is employed in the United States Veterans Administration,
provided such practice is limited to such service or
employment;
- Any intern who is employed by a hospital and who is a
graduate of a medical school in the United States or Canada,
provided such practice is limited to such hospital and is under
the supervision of a licensed physician; or
- Any medical student who is performing a clinical clerkship or
similar function in a hospital and who is matriculated in a
medical school which meets standards satisfactory to the
department, provided such practice is limited to such clerkship
or similar function in such hospital.
- Any dentist or dental school graduate eligible for licensure
in the state who administers anesthesia as part of a hospital
residency program established for the purpose of training
dentists in anesthesiology.
- A not-for-profit medical or dental expense indemnity
corporation or a hospital service corporation organized under the
insurance law may employ licensed physicians and enter into
contracts with partnerships or medical corporations organized
under article forty-four of the public health law, health
maintenance organizations possessing a certificate of authority
pursuant to article forty-four of the public health law,
professional corporations organized under article fifteen of the
business corporation law or other groups of physicians to
practice medicine on its behalf for persons insured under its
contracts or policies.
- Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of any general,
special or local law, any licensed physician who voluntarily and
without the expectation of monetary compensation renders first
aid or emergency treatment at the scene of an accident or other
emergency, outside a hospital, doctor's office or any other
place having proper and necessary medical equipment, to a person
who is unconscious, ill or injured, shall not be liable for
damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by such
person or for damages for the death of such person alleged to
have occurred by reason of an act or omission in the rendering of
such first aid or emergency treatment unless it is established
that such injuries were or such death was caused by gross
negligence on the part of such physician. Nothing in this
subdivision shall be deemed or construed to relieve a licensed
physician from liability for damages for injuries or death caused
by an act or omission on the part of a physician while rendering
professional services in the normal and ordinary course of his
practice.
- No individual who serves as a member of (a) a committee
established to administer a utilization review plan of a
hospital, including a hospital as defined in article twenty-eight
of the public health law or a hospital as defined in subdivision
ten of section 1.03 of the mental hygiene law, or (b) a committee
having the responsibility of the investigation of an incident
reported pursuant to section 29.29 of the mental hygiene law or
the evaluation and improvement of the quality of care rendered in
a hospital as defined in article twenty-eight of the public
health law or a hospital as defined in subdivision ten of section
1.03 of the mental hygiene law, or (c) any medical review
committee or subcommittee thereof of a local, county or state
medical, dental, podiatry or optometrical society, any such
society itself, a professional standards review organization or
an individual when such committee, subcommittee, society,
organization or individual is performing any medical or quality
assurance review function including the investigation of an
incident reported pursuant to section 29.29 of the mental hygiene
law, either described in clauses (a) and (b) of this subdivision,
required by law, or involving any controversy or dispute between
(i) a physician, dentist, podiatrist or optometrist or hospital
administrator and a patient concerning the diagnosis, treatment
or care of such patient or the fees or charges therefor or (ii) a
physician, dentist, podiatrist or optometrist or hospital
administrator and a provider of medical, dental, podiatric or
optometrical services concerning any medical or health charges or
fees of such physician, dentist, podiatrist or optometrist, or
(d) a committee appointed pursuant to section twenty-eight
hundred five-j of the public health law to participate in the
medical and dental malpractice prevention program, or (e) any
individual who participated in the preparation of incident
reports required by the department of health pursuant to section
twenty-eight hundred five-l of the public health law, or (f) a
committee established to administer a utilization review plan, or
a committee having the responsibility of evaluation and
improvement of the quality of care rendered, in a health
maintenance organization organized under article forty-four of
the public health law or article forty-three of the insurance
law, including a committee of an individual practice association
or medical group acting pursuant to a contract with such a health
maintenance organization, shall be liable in damages to any
person for any action taken or recommendations made, by him
within the scope of his function in such capacity provided that
(a) such individual has taken action or made recommendations
within the scope of his function and without malice, and (b) in
the reasonable belief after reasonable investigation that the act
or recommendation was warranted, based upon the facts disclosed.
Neither the proceedings nor the records relating to performance
of a medical or a quality assurance review function or
participation in a medical and dental malpractice prevention
program nor any report required by the department of health
pursuant to section twenty-eight hundred five-l of the public
health law described herein, including the investigation of an
incident reported pursuant to section 29.29 of the mental hygiene
law, shall be subject to disclosure under article thirty-one of
the civil practice law and rules except as hereinafter provided
or as provided by any other provision of law. No person in
attendance at a meeting when a medical or a quality assurance
review or a medical and dental malpractice prevention program or
an incident reporting function described herein was performed,
including the investigation of an incident reported pursuant to
section 29.29 of the mental hygiene law, shall be required to
testify as to what transpired thereat. The prohibition relating
to discovery of testimony shall not apply to the statements made
by any person in attendance at such a meeting who is a party to
an action or proceeding the subject matter of which was reviewed
at such meeting.
- This article shall not be construed to affect or prevent the
following:
- The furnishing of medical assistance in an emergency;
- The practice of the religious tenets of any church;
- A physician from refusing to perform an act constituting the
practice of medicine to which he is conscientiously opposed by
reason of religious training and belief.
- The organization of a medical corporation under article
forty-four of the public health law, the organization of a
university faculty practice corporation under section fourteen
hundred twelve of the not-forprofit corporation law or the
organization of a professional service corporation under article
fifteen of the business corporation law.
- The physician's use of whatever medical care,
conventional or nonconventional, which effectively treats human
disease, pain, injury, deformity or physical condition.
- There shall be no monetary liability on the part of, and no
cause of action for damages shall arise against, any person,
partnership, corporation, firm, society, or other entity on
account of the communication of information in the possession of
such person or entity, or on account of any recommendation or
evaluation, regarding the qualifications, fitness, or
professional conduct or practices of a physician, to any
governmental agency, medical or specialists society, a hospital
as defined in article twenty-eight of the public health law, a
hospital as defined in subdivision ten of section 1.03 of the
mental hygiene law, or a health maintenance organization
organized under article forty-four of the public health law or
article forty-three of the insurance law, including a committee
of an individual practice association or medical group acting
pursuant to a contract with a health maintenance organization.
The foregoing shall not apply to information which is untrue and
communicated with malicious intent.
- A licensed physician may prescribe and order a non-patient
specific regimen to a registered professional nurse, pursuant to
regulations promulgated by the commissioner, and consistent with
the public health law, for:
- administering immunizations.
- the emergency treatment of anaphylaxis.
- administering purified protein derivative (PPD) tests.
- administering tests to determine the presence of the human immunodeficiency virus.
- Notwithstanding any other provisions of this article or any
law to the contrary, an individual who at the time of his
enrollment in a medical school outside the United States is a
resident of the United States shall be eligible for licensure in
this state if he has satisfied the requirements of subdivisions
one, five, six, seven and eight of section sixty-five hundred
twenty-four of this chapter and:
- has studied medicine in a medical school located outside the
United States which is recognized by the World Health
Organization;
- has completed all of the formal requirements of the foreign
medical school except internship and/or social service;
- has attained a score satisfactory to a medical school
approved by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education on a
qualifying examination acceptable to the state board for
medicine, and has satisfactorily completed one academic year of
supervised clinical training under the direction of such medical
school;
- has completed the post-graduate hospital training required by
the Board of all applicants for licensure; and
- has passed the examination required by the Board of all
applicants for licensure.
- Satisfaction of the requirements of paragraphs (1), (2), and
(3) of subdivision (a) of this section shall be in lieu of the
completion of any foreign internship and/or social service
requirements, and no such requirements shall be a condition of
licensure as a physician in this State.
- Satisfaction of the requirements of paragraphs (1), (2), and
(3) of subdivision (a) of this section shall be in lieu of
certification by the Educational Council for Foreign Medical
Graduates, and such certification shall not be a condition of
licensure as a physician in this State for candidates who have
completed the requirements of subdivision (a) of this
section.
- No hospital licensed by this State, or operated by the State
or a political subdivision thereof, or which receives state
financial assistance, directly or indirectly, shall require an
individual who has satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1),
(2), and (3) of subdivision (a) of this section, and who at the
time of his enrollment in a medical school outside the United
States is a resident of the United States, to satisfy any further
education or examination requirements prior to commencing an
internship or residency.
- A document granted by a medical school located outside the
United States which is recognized by the World Health
Organization issued after the completion of all the formal
requirements of such foreign medical school except internship
and/or social service shall, upon certification by the medical
school in which such training was received of satisfactory
completion by the person to whom such document was issued of the
requirements listed in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of this
section, be deemed the equivalent of a degree of doctor of
medicine for purposes of licensure and practice as a physician in
this State.
Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the
board of regents is authorized, in its discretion, to confer the
degree of doctor of medicine (M.D.) upon physicians who are
licensed pursuant to section sixty-five hundred twenty-four or
sixty-five hundred twenty-eight of this chapter. Each applicant
shall pay a fee of three hundred dollars to the education
department for the issuance of such degree.
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