By: Nelson, Huffman S.B. No. 190
 
  (Kolkhorst)
 
   
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to the licensing and regulation of physicians, physician
  assistants, acupuncturists, and surgical assistants.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
  ARTICLE 1.  REGULATION OF PHYSICIANS
         SECTION 1.01.  Subsection (d), Section 153.051, Occupations
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         (d)  The board may not set, charge, collect, receive, or
  deposit any of the following fees in excess of:
               (1)  $900 for a license;
               (2)  $400 for a first registration permit;
               (3)  $200 for a temporary license;
               (4)  $400 for renewal of a registration permit;
               (5)  $200 for a physician-in-training permit;
               (6)  $600 for the processing of an application and the
  issuance of a registration for anesthesia in an outpatient setting;
               (7)  $200 for an endorsement to other state medical
  boards;
               (8)  $200 for a duplicate license; or
               (9)  [$700 for a reinstated license after cancellation
  for cause; or
               [(10)]  $1,200 for an annual fee under Section
  167.011(c) for a program participant in the Texas Physician Health
  Program.
         SECTION 1.02.  Section 154.051, Occupations Code, is amended
  by adding Subsections (d) and (e) to read as follows:
         (d)  The board may not consider or act on a complaint
  involving care provided more than seven years before the date on
  which the complaint is filed unless the care was provided to a
  minor. If the care was provided to a minor, the board may not
  consider or act on a complaint involving the care after the later
  of:
               (1)  the date the minor is 21 years of age; or
               (2)  the seventh anniversary of the date of the care.
         (e)  On receipt of a complaint, the board may consider a
  previously investigated complaint to determine whether there is a
  pattern of practice violating this subtitle.
         SECTION 1.03.  Subchapter B, Chapter 154, Occupations Code,
  is amended by adding Section 154.0535 to read as follows:
         Sec. 154.0535.  REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN COMPLAINTS.
  (a)  In this section:
               (1)  "Anonymous complaint" means a complaint that lacks
  sufficient information to identify the source or the name of the
  person who filed the complaint.
               (2)  "Insurance agent" means a person licensed under
  Chapter 4054, Insurance Code.
               (3)  "Insurer" means an insurance company or other
  entity authorized to engage in the business of insurance under
  Subtitle C, Title 6, Insurance Code.
               (4)  "Third-party administrator" means a person
  required to have a certificate of authority under Chapter 4151,
  Insurance Code.
         (b)  The board may not accept anonymous complaints.
         (c)  Notwithstanding any confidentiality requirements under
  Chapter 552, Government Code, this subtitle, or rules adopted under
  this subtitle, a complaint filed with the board by an insurance
  agent, insurer, pharmaceutical company, or third-party
  administrator against a physician must include the name and address
  of the insurance agent, insurer, pharmaceutical company, or
  third-party administrator filing the complaint.  Not later than the
  15th day after the date the complaint is filed with the board, the
  board shall notify the physician who is the subject of the complaint
  of the name and address of the insurance agent, insurer,
  pharmaceutical company, or third-party administrator who filed the
  complaint, unless the notice would jeopardize an investigation.
         SECTION 1.04.  Subsection (b), Section 154.057, Occupations
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         (b)  The board shall complete a preliminary investigation of
  the complaint not later than the 45th [30th] day after the date of
  receiving the complaint. The board shall first determine whether
  the physician constitutes a continuing threat to the public
  welfare. On completion of the preliminary investigation, the board
  shall determine whether to officially proceed on the complaint. If
  the board fails to complete the preliminary investigation in the
  time required by this subsection, the board's official
  investigation of the complaint is considered to commence on that
  date.
         SECTION 1.05.  Subsection (e), Section 155.003, Occupations
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         (e)  An applicant is not eligible for a license if:
               (1)  the applicant:
                     (A)  holds a medical license that is currently
  restricted for cause under a disciplinary order or[, canceled for
  cause,] suspended for cause;[,] or
                     (B)  held a medical license that was surrendered
  or canceled for cause or revoked by a state, another country [a
  province of Canada], or a uniformed service of the United States;
               (2)  an investigation or a proceeding is instituted
  against the applicant for the restriction, cancellation,
  suspension, or revocation by another [in a] state or country[, a
  province of Canada,] or by a uniformed service of the United States;
  or
               (3)  a prosecution is pending against the applicant in
  any state or[,] federal court[,] or [Canadian] court in another
  country for any offense that under the laws of this state is a
  felony or a misdemeanor that involves moral turpitude.
         SECTION 1.06.  Subsection (b), Section 155.101, Occupations
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         (b)  The board may not grant a provisional license under this
  section to an applicant who:
               (1)  has had a medical license suspended or revoked by
  another state or country [a Canadian province]; or
               (2)  holds a medical license issued by another state or
  country [a Canadian province] that is subject to a restriction,
  disciplinary order, or probationary order.
         SECTION 1.07.  Subsection (b), Section 155.104, Occupations
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         (b)  The board may issue a faculty temporary license to
  practice medicine to a physician as provided by this section.  The
  physician:
               (1)  must hold a current medical license that is
  unrestricted and not subject to a disciplinary order or probation
  in another state or country [a Canadian province] or have completed
  at least three years of postgraduate residency;
               (2)  may not:
                     (A)  hold a medical license in another state or
  country [a Canadian province] that has any restrictions,
  disciplinary orders, or probation; or
                     (B)  have held a medical license that was
  surrendered or canceled for cause or revoked by another state or
  country or by a uniformed service of the United States;
               (3)  must pass the Texas medical jurisprudence
  examination; and
               (4)  must hold a salaried faculty position equivalent
  to at least the level of assistant professor and be working
  full-time at one of the following institutions:
                     (A)  The University of Texas Medical Branch at
  Galveston;
                     (B)  The University of Texas Southwestern Medical
  Center at Dallas;
                     (C)  The University of Texas Health Science Center
  at Houston;
                     (D)  The University of Texas Health Science Center
  at San Antonio;
                     (E)  The University of Texas Health Center at
  Tyler;
                     (F)  The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer
  Center;
                     (G)  Texas A&M University College of Medicine;
                     (H)  the Schools of Medicine at Texas Tech
  University Health Sciences Center;
                     (I)  Baylor College of Medicine;
                     (J)  the University of North Texas Health Science
  Center at Fort Worth;
                     (K)  an institutional sponsor of a graduate
  medical education program accredited by the Accreditation Council
  for Graduate Medical Education; or
                     (L)  a nonprofit health corporation certified
  under Section 162.001 and affiliated with a program described by
  Paragraph (K).
         SECTION 1.08.  Section 164.003, Occupations Code, is amended
  by amending Subsections (b) and (f) and adding Subsection (i) to
  read as follows:
         (b)  Rules adopted under this section must require that:
               (1)  an informal meeting in compliance with Section
  2001.054, Government Code, be scheduled not later than the 180th
  day after the date the board's official investigation of the
  complaint is commenced as provided by Section 154.057(b), unless
  good cause is shown by the board for scheduling the informal meeting
  after that date;
               (2)  the board give notice to the license holder of the
  time and place of the meeting not later than the 45th [30th] day
  before the date the meeting is held;
               (3)  the complainant and the license holder be provided
  an opportunity to be heard;
               (4)  at least one of the board members or district
  review committee members participating in the informal meeting as a
  panelist be a member who represents the public;
               (5)  the board's legal counsel or a representative of
  the attorney general be present to advise the board or the board's
  staff; and
               (6)  a member of the board's staff be at the meeting to
  present to the board's representative the facts the staff
  reasonably believes it could prove by competent evidence or
  qualified witnesses at a hearing.
         (f)  The notice required by Subsection (b)(2) must be
  accompanied by a written statement of the nature of the allegations
  and the information the board intends to use at the meeting. If the
  board does not provide the statement or information at that time,
  the license holder may use that failure as grounds for rescheduling
  the informal meeting. If the complaint includes an allegation that
  the license holder has violated the standard of care, the notice
  must include a copy of the report by the expert physician reviewer.
  The license holder must provide to the board the license holder's
  rebuttal at least 15 [five] business days before the date of the
  meeting in order for the information to be considered at the
  meeting.
         (i)  On request by a physician under review, the board shall
  make a recording of the informal settlement conference proceeding.
  The recording is a part of the investigative file and may not be
  released to a third party unless authorized under this subtitle.  
  The board may charge the physician a fee to cover the cost of
  recording the hearing.
  ARTICLE 2.  REGULATION OF PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS
         SECTION 2.01.  Section 204.058, Occupations Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         Sec. 204.058.  OPEN MEETINGS; ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE LAW.  
  (a)  Except as otherwise provided by this chapter, the physician
  assistant board is subject to Chapters 551 and 2001, Government
  Code.
         (b)  The physician assistant board may hear all evidence and
  arguments and conduct deliberations relating to license
  applications and disciplinary actions under this chapter in
  executive sessions. The board shall vote and announce its
  decisions in open session. Deliberations by the board relating to
  license applications and disciplinary actions are exempt from
  Chapter 551, Government Code.
         SECTION 2.02.  Subsections (a) and (b), Section 204.153,
  Occupations Code, are amended to read as follows:
         (a)  To be eligible for a license under this chapter, an
  applicant must:
               (1)  successfully complete an educational program for
  physician assistants or surgeon assistants accredited by the
  Committee on Allied Health Education and Accreditation or by that
  committee's predecessor or successor entities;
               (2)  pass the Physician Assistant National Certifying
  Examination administered by the National Commission on
  Certification of Physician Assistants;
               (3)  hold a certificate issued by the National
  Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants;
               (4)  be of good professional [moral] character;
               (5)  meet any other requirement established by board
  rule; and
               (6)  pass a jurisprudence examination approved by the
  physician assistant board as provided by Subsection (a-1).
         (b)  In addition to the requirements of Subsection (a), an
  applicant is not eligible for a license[, unless the physician
  assistant board takes the fact into consideration in determining
  whether to issue the license,] if the applicant:
               (1)  has been issued a license, certificate, or
  registration as a physician assistant in this state or from a
  licensing authority in another state that is revoked or suspended;
  or
               (2)  is subject to probation or other disciplinary
  action for cause resulting from the applicant's acts as a physician
  assistant.
         SECTION 2.03.  Section 204.155, Occupations Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         Sec. 204.155.  TEMPORARY LICENSE.  [(a)]  The physician
  assistant board may adopt rules and set fees relating to granting
  temporary licenses and extending the expiration dates of temporary
  licenses.  The board by rule shall set a time limit for the term of
  [issue] a temporary license [to an applicant who:
               [(1)     meets all the qualifications for a license under
  this chapter but is waiting for the license to be issued at the next
  scheduled meeting of the board;
               [(2)     seeks to temporarily substitute for a licensed
  physician assistant during the license holder's absence, if the
  applicant:
                     [(A)     is licensed or registered in good standing
  in another state;
                     [(B)     submits an application on a form prescribed
  by the board; and
                     [(C)     pays the appropriate fee prescribed by the
  board; or
               [(3)     has graduated from an educational program for
  physician assistants or surgeon assistants described by Section
  204.153(a)(1) not later than six months before applying for a
  temporary license and is waiting for examination results from the
  National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants.
         [(b)     A temporary license may be valid for not more than one
  year after the date issued as determined by board rule].
         SECTION 2.04.  Subchapter D,  Chapter 204, Occupations Code,
  is amended by adding Section 204.1551 to read as follows:
         Sec. 204.1551.  POSTGRADUATE TRAINING PERMIT.  (a)  The
  physician assistant board by rule may issue a physician assistant
  postgraduate training permit to a physician assistant not otherwise
  licensed by the board who is participating in a graduate physician
  assistant education training program approved by the board.
         (b)  A physician assistant postgraduate training permit does
  not authorize the performance of a physician assistant act by the
  permit holder unless the act is performed:
               (1)  as a part of the graduate medical education
  training program; and
               (2)  under the supervision of a physician and a
  physician assistant.
         (c)  The physician assistant board has jurisdiction to
  discipline a permit holder whose permit has expired if the
  violation of the law occurred during the time the permit was valid.
  If an investigation is open when the permit expires, the permit
  shall be executory and the board may retain jurisdiction.
         SECTION 2.05.  Section 204.156, Occupations Code, is amended
  by adding Subsections (g) and (h) to read as follows:
         (g)  If the person's license has been expired for one year or
  longer, the person's license is automatically canceled, unless an
  investigation is pending, and the person may not renew the license.
         (h)  A physician assistant whose license is automatically
  canceled may obtain a new license by complying with the
  requirements, fees, and procedures for obtaining a new license.
  The physician assistant board may issue a new license without
  examination to a person whose license is automatically canceled for
  less than two years.
  ARTICLE 3.  REGULATION OF ACUPUNCTURISTS
         SECTION 3.01.  Section 205.060, Occupations Code, is amended
  to read as follows:
         Sec. 205.060.  APPLICATION OF OPEN MEETINGS, OPEN RECORDS,
  AND ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURE LAWS.  (a)  Except as provided by this
  chapter, the acupuncture board is subject to Chapters 551, 552, and
  2001, Government Code.
         (b)  The acupuncture board may hear all evidence and
  arguments and conduct deliberations relating to license
  applications and disciplinary actions under this chapter in
  executive sessions. The board shall vote and announce its
  decisions in open session. Deliberations by the board relating to
  license applications and disciplinary actions are exempt from
  Chapter 551, Government Code.
         SECTION 3.02.  Section 205.3544, Occupations Code, is
  amended to read as follows:
         Sec. 205.3544.  LIMIT ON ACCESS TO INVESTIGATION FILES.
  (a)  Each complaint, adverse report, investigation file, other
  investigation report, and other investigative information in the
  possession of or received or gathered by the acupuncture board or a
  medical board employee or agent relating to a license holder, an
  application for license, or a criminal investigation or proceeding
  is privileged and confidential and is not subject to discovery,
  subpoena, or other means of legal compulsion for release to anyone
  other than the acupuncture board or medical board employees or
  agents involved in discipline of a license holder.
         (b)  Investigation records relating to an application for
  license and disciplinary action of a license holder are exempt from
  Chapter 552, Government Code.
         (c)  For purposes of this section, investigative information
  includes information relating to the identity of, and a report made
  by, a physician performing or supervising compliance monitoring for
  the acupuncture board [The acupuncture board shall prohibit or
  limit access to an investigation file relating to a license holder
  in an informal proceeding in the manner provided by Section
  164.007(c)].
  ARTICLE 4.  REGULATION OF SURGICAL ASSISTANTS
         SECTION 4.01.  Subchapter B, Chapter 206, Occupations Code,
  is amended by adding Section 206.059 to read as follows:
         Sec. 206.059.  MEDICAL BOARD MEETINGS; CONFIDENTIALITY.
  (a)  The medical board may hear all evidence and arguments and
  conduct deliberations relating to license applications and
  disciplinary actions under this chapter in executive sessions.  The
  medical board shall vote and announce its decisions in open
  session.
         (b)  Deliberations and records relating to the professional
  character and fitness of applicants as well as related to
  disciplinary actions are exempt from Chapters 551 and 552,
  Government Code.
         SECTION 4.02.  Subsection (a), Section 206.203, Occupations
  Code, is amended to read as follows:
         (a)  Except as provided by Section 206.206, to be eligible
  for a license, a person must:
               (1)  be of good professional [moral] character;
               (2)  have not been convicted of a felony or a crime
  involving moral turpitude;
               (3)  not use drugs or alcohol to an extent that affects
  the applicant's professional competency;
               (4)  not have had a license or certification revoked by
  a licensing agency or by a certifying professional organization;
  and
               (5)  not have engaged in fraud or deceit in applying for
  a license under this chapter.
  ARTICLE 5. TRANSITION PROVISIONS
         SECTION 5.01.  Sections 153.051, 155.003, 155.101, 155.104,
  204.153, 204.155, and 206.203, Occupations Code, as amended by this
  Act, apply only to an application for a license filed with the
  applicable licensing authority on or after the effective date of
  this Act. An application for a license filed before the effective
  date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the date the
  application was filed, and that law is continued in effect for that
  purpose.
         SECTION 5.02.  Sections 154.051, 154.057, and 164.003,
  Occupations Code, as amended by this Act, and Section 154.0535,
  Occupations Code, as added by this Act, apply only to the
  investigation of a complaint filed on or after the effective date of
  this Act. The investigation of a complaint filed before that date
  is governed by the law in effect on the date the complaint was
  filed, and that law is continued in effect for that purpose.
         SECTION 5.03.  Section 204.058, Occupations Code, as amended
  by this Act, and Subsection (b), Section 205.060, and Section
  206.059, Occupations Code, as added by this Act, apply only to a
  contested case hearing conducted on or after the effective date of
  this Act. A contested case filed before the effective date of this
  Act is governed by the law in effect on the date the contested case
  was filed, and that law is continued in effect for that purpose.
         SECTION 5.04.  Section 204.156, Occupations Code, as amended
  by this Act, applies only to a license that expires on or after the
  effective date of this Act. A license that expires before the
  effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on the
  date the license expires, and that law is continued in effect for
  that purpose.
  ARTICLE 6. EFFECTIVE DATE
         SECTION 6.01.  This Act takes effect September 1, 2011.