Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1984 )


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  •                                               The Attorney         General of Texas
    JIM MATTOX
    June 21, 1984
    Attorney General
    Supreme      Court Building             Honorable Chet Brooks                    opinion No. JM-173
    P. 0. Box 12546
    Austin.    TX. 76711. 2546
    Chairman
    512/475G?501
    Committee on Health 8 Human Resources    Re: The Nurse Practice Act
    Telex    0101674.1367                   Texas State Senate                       exception   for acts    done
    Telecopier     5121475.0266             P. 0. Box 12068, Capitol Station         under the control or super-
    Austin, Texas   78711                    vision or at the instruction
    714 Jackson.    Suite 700
    of a physician
    Dallas,   TX. 75202-4506
    2141742-6044                            Dear Senator Brooks:
    Your letter ~requesting an opinion from this office poses the
    4624 Alberta       Ave., Suite    160
    following questions:
    El Paso. TX.       70605-2703
    015/533.3484
    1. Do the provisions of section 3.06(d) of the
    Medical Practice Act, article 4495b, V.T.C.S.,
    r      31 Texas,    Suite 700                         governing physicians’ delegation of authority to
    ,oustm,     TX. 77002-3111                       nonphysicians apply to acts exempted from the
    713,223.5666
    Nurse Practice Act as ‘acts done under the control
    or supervision or at the instruction of one
    606 Broadway,         Suite 312                   licensed by the Texas Board of Medical Examiners?’
    Lubbock,     TX.    70401-3470
    606,747.5236                                         2. Does the Board of Medical Examiners have
    the authority to regulate the details and means
    4309 N. Tenth, Suite S                            and manner of the physician’s [delegations of
    ,&Allen,    TX. 76501-1665                        authority to nonphysicians acting under the]
    5121662-4547                                      control or supervision or at the instruction of
    one licensed by the Texas State Board of Medical
    200 Main Plaza, Suite 400                         Examiners? In other words, may the board adopt
    San Antonio.  TX. 76205.2707                      regulations requiring that: (a) the instruction
    51212254101                                       be addressed to the particular person who will do
    the act,    (h) the instructing physician be
    familiar with the training and skill,s of the
    An Equal      Opportunity/
    Affirmative     Action     Employer
    person who will     do the act, or        (c) the
    instruction be directed to a natural person and
    not to an institution or corporation?
    Article 4495b, section 1.03(8) defines “practicing medicine” as
    follows:
    (8) . . . A person shall be considered to be
    practicing medicine within this Act:
    p. 759
    Honorable Chet Brooks - Page 2        (JM-173)
    (A) who shall publicly profess to be a
    physician or surgeon and shall diagnose, treat. or
    offer to treat any disease or disorder, mental or
    physical, or any physical deformity or injury by
    any system or method or to effect cures thereof;
    or
    (B) who shall diagnose, treat, or offer to
    treat any disease or disorder, mental or physical,
    or any physical deformity or injury by any system
    or method and to effect cures thereof and charge
    therefor, directly or indirectly, money or other
    compensation.
    Article 4518. V.T.C.S.,     contains         the   following   definition   of
    "professional nursing":
    sec. 5. Insofar as any of the following acts
    require substantial specialized judgment and skill
    and insofar as the proper performance of any of
    the following acts is based upon knowledge and
    application of the principles of biologixal,
    physical, and social science as acquired by a
    completed course in an approved school of
    professional nursing, 'Professional Nursing' shall
    be defined as the performance for compensation of
    any nursing act (a) in the observation, assess-
    ment , intervention, evaluation, rehabilitation,
    care and counsel and health teachings of persons
    who are ill, injured or infirm or experiencing
    changes in normal health processes; (b) in the
    maintenance of health or prevention of illness;
    (4     in the administration of medications or
    treatments  as prescribed by a licensed physician
    or dentist; (d) in the supervision or teaching of
    nursing; (e) in the administration, supervision,
    and evaluation of nursing practices, policies, and
    procedures. The foregoing shall not be deemed to
    include acts of medical diagnosis or prescription
    of therapeutic or corrective measures.
    There is considerable overlap between these          definitions.    A
    physician's license authorizes him to perform all nursing acts within
    sections 5(a). (b), and (c). The medical acts delegated to non-
    physicians are virtually always acts involving the care and treatment
    of a patient. Moreover, s physician's license authorizes him to
    perform all nursing acts involving diagnosi~s,treatment, and care of a
    patient. See generally Baker v. State, 
    240 S.W. 924
    (Tex. Grim. App.
    1921); Attorney General  Opinions MW-318 (1981); H-1295 (1978); H-27
    (1973). We will therefore limit this opinion to those nursing acts
    set out in sections 5(a), (b). and (c), since it seems apparent that
    p.    760
    Honorable Chet Brooks - Page 3   (JM-173)
    this will adequately address the delegations about which you are
    concerned.
    The Nurse Practice Act permits licensed nurses under certain
    circumstances to perform medical acts that they could not otherwise
    perform without violating article 4495b. See V.T.C.S. art. 4495b,
    53.06(b)(4). The two acts are in pari mass         and should be read
    together. -See 53 Tex. Jur. 2d Statutes 5186, at 280.
    When the Medical Practice Act and the Nurse Practice Act are read
    together, it is apparent that a licensed physician is exempted from
    the Nurse Practice Act only when his actions are authorized by the
    Medical Practice Act. Article 4528 makes the Nurse Practice Act
    inapplicable
    to acts done by persons licensed by any board or
    agency of the State of Texas if such acts are
    authorized by such licensing statutes. (Emphasis
    added).
    It is equally clear, however, that a physician violates the Medical
    Practice Act if he fails to conform his delegations of medical acts to
    the requirements of subsection 3.06(d)(l) of that act, article 4495b.
    V.T.C.S., which reads:
    [A] person licensed to practice medicine shall
    have the authority to delegate to any qualified
    and properly trained person or persons acting
    under the physician's supervision any medical act
    which a reasonable and prudent physician would
    find is within the scope of sound medical judgment
    to delegate if. in the opinion of the delegating
    phvsician, the act can be properly and safely
    performed by the person to whim the medical act is
    delegated and the act is performed in its
    customary manner, not in violation of any other
    statute, and the person does not hold himself out
    to the public as being authorized to practice
    medicine. The delegating physician shall remain
    responsible for the medical acts of the person
    performing the delegated medical acts. The [Texas
    State Board of Medical Examiners] may determine
    whether or not an act constitutes the practice of
    medicine, not inconsistent with this Act, and may
    determine whether any medical act may or may not
    be    properly    or     safely    delegated    by
    physicians . . . . (Emphasis added).
    A physician is not relieved of his responsibility under the
    Medical Practice Act simply because the exception to the Nurse
    Practice Act makes the Nurse Practice Act inapplicable to "acts done
    p. 76i
    Honorable Chet Brooks - Page 4        (JM-173)
    ?
    under the control or supervision or at the instruction of" a
    physician. V.T.C.S. art. 4528. The Medical Practice Act expressly
    provides that the physician "remains responsible for the medical acts
    of the person performing the delegated medical acts." Moreover, his
    personal exemption from the Nurse Practice Act is conditioned upon the
    validity of his acts under the Medical Practice Act. Thus, in answer
    to your first question, we advise that the provisions of section
    3.06(d) of the Medical Practice Act apply to a physician's delegation
    of authority to a non-physician even though the act delegated may come
    within the term, "nursing act," as described by the Nurse Practice
    Act.
    In contrast, however, the Nurse Practice Act exemption for
    non-licensed persons acting under the supervision, control or
    instruction of a licensed physician is not conditioned upon the
    physician's actual authority to delegate theact.   In our opinion, the
    Nurse Practice Act is designed to protect persons who, in good faith,
    act at the direction of a licensed physician, though the physician may
    have violated the Medical Practice Act in giving the direction.
    Section 3.07(i) of the Medical Practice Act, with which the Nurse
    Practice Act must be read, expressly provides:
    A person to whom a physician has delegated a
    medical act to perform is not guilty of practicing
    medicine without a license unless the person acts
    with knowledge that the delegation and action
    thereunder is a violation of this Act.
    We conclude that a physician may violate the Medical Practice Act by
    delegating nursing acts in a manner not permitted by the Medical
    Practice Act, but that a person performing the delegated nursing act
    in good faith -- although acting as the delegate= of such a physician
    -- violates neither the Nurse Practice Act nor the Medical Practice
    Act.
    Your second question consists of a general inquiry and three
    subparts. The general question asks whether the Texas State Board of
    Medical Examiners has authority to regulate the details, means, and
    manner of delegating nursing acts to be done under a physician's
    control or supervision or at his instruction.
    We have already observed that the provisions of section 3.06(d)
    of the Medical Practice Act apply to a physician's delegation of
    article 4518 nursing acts to non-physicians. The final sentence of
    subsection 3.06(d)(l) of the Medical Practice Act, states:
    The board may determine whether or not an act
    constitutes the   practice of   medicine,   not
    inconsistent with this Act. and may   determine
    p.    762
    Honorable Chet Brooks - Page 5     (JM-173)
    whether any medical act may or may not be properly
    or safely delegated by physicians . . . .
    since, in our view, nursing acts in question are species of medical
    acts under the Medical Practice Act , we advise that the Texas State
    Board of Medical Examiners does have such authority, consistent with
    the Medical Practice Act.
    The subparts of your question concern the authority of the Texas
    State Board of Medical Examiners to require that a physician's
    instructions be addressed to a particular person. to require that the
    instructing physician be familiar with the training and skills of the
    person who will perform the delegated act, or to require that such
    instructions be directed to a natural person rather than to an
    institution or corporation.
    Regulations of the board respecting a physician's delegations of
    medical acts must be "not inconsistent" with the Medical Practice Act,
    which expressly states that
    the individual physician should be given the
    greatest opportunity to      exercise his     best
    independent professional judgment in deciding what
    medical acts can be safely delegated; therefore.
    rules of the board regulating delegation should
    have the purpose of promoting such exercise of
    professional judgment and      decision by     not
    containing, except as absolutely necessary, global
    prohibitions or restrictions on delegation of
    medical acts . . . .
    V.T.C.S. art. 4495b, §1.02(8).      Furthermore, the act is to be
    construed in a way that permits licensed physicians to delegate such
    acts to "any qualified and properly trained person or persons" under
    his supervision. 
    Id. 03.06(d)(l). We
    think the Texas State Board of
    Medical Examiners, pursuant to the statute. might set standards
    applicable to the selection of persons "qualified and properly
    trained" to perform particular acts under the physician's supervision,
    but not itself to select the only individuals to whom such acts might
    be delegated. -Cf. 22 T.A.C. 1193.1 (1982).
    We also believe the board has statutory authority to require that
    physicians be familiar with the training and skills of the person whom
    the physician instructs to perform delegated medical acts. Such power
    is easily encompassed by the express authority of the board to
    "determine whether any medical act may or may not be properly or
    safely delegated by physicians." V.T.C.S. art. 4495b. 53.06(d)(l).
    Similarly, it would not be inconsistent with the Medical Practice
    Act for the board to require that instructions of a physician
    concerning the performance of delegated medical acts be directed only
    p. 763
    Honorable Chet Brooks - Page 6     (JM-173)
    to natural persons. Section 1.03(6) of the act states that the word
    "person," as used in the act, "means an individual unless otherwise
    expressly made applicable to a partnership, association, or
    corporation." Section 3.06(d) thereof, which allows such delegations,
    speaks only of "persons" and is not "otherwise made applicable" to
    institutions or corporations. _Cf. Attorney General Opinions MU-318
    (1981); H-395 (1974).
    SUMMARY
    A physician may violate the Medical Practice
    Act by delegating nursing acts in a manner not
    permitted by the Medical Practice Act, but a
    non-licensed person performing the delegated
    nursing act in good faith -- although acting as
    the delegatee of such a physician -- violates
    neither the Nurse Practice Act or the Medical
    Practice Act. The Texas State Board of Medical
    Examiners has authority, consistent with the
    Medical Practice Act, to regulate the details,
    means and manner of delegating nursing acts done
    under a physician's control or supervision or at
    his instruction.
    Attorney General of Texas
    TOM GREEN
    First Assistant Attorney General
    DAVID R. RICHARDS
    Executive Assistant Attorney General
    Prepared by Susan L. Garrison
    Assistant Attorney General
    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    Rick Gilpin, Chairman
    David Brooks
    Colin Carl
    Susan Garrison
    Jim Moellinger
    Nancy Sutton
    p. 764
    

Document Info

Docket Number: JM-173

Judges: Jim Mattox

Filed Date: 7/2/1984

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017