SB 491, as amended, Hernandez. Nurse practitioners.
Existing law, the Nursing Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of nurse practitioners by the Board of Registered Nursing. Existing law requires an applicant for initial qualification or certification as a nurse practitioner who has never been qualified or certified as a nurse practitioner in California or in any other state to meet specified requirements, including possessing a master’s degree in nursing, a master’s degree in a clinical field related to nursing, or a graduate degree in nursing, and to have satisfactorily completed a nurse practitioner program approved by the board. Existing law authorizes the implementation of standardized procedures that authorize a nurse practitioner to perform certain acts, including, among others, ordering durable medical equipment, and, in consultation with a physician and surgeon, approving, signing, modifying, or adding to a plan of treatment or plan for an individual receiving home health services or personal care services.
This bill would revise these provisions by deleting the requirement that those acts be performed pursuant to a standardized procedure or in consultation with a physician and surgeon. The bill would also authorize a nurse practitioner to perform specified additional acts, including, among others,begin delete examining patients andend delete establishingbegin delete a medical diagnosisend deletebegin insert physical diagnosesend insert and prescribing drugs and devices. The bill would require that, on and after July 1, 2016, an applicant for initial qualification or certification as a nurse practitioner hold a national certification as a nurse practitioner from
a national certifying body recognized by the board.
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature finds and declares all of the
2following:
3(a) Nurse practitioners are a longstanding, vital, safe, effective,
4and important part of the state’s health care delivery system. They
5are especially important given California’s shortage of physicians,
6with just 16 of 58 counties having the federally recommended ratio
7of physicians to residents.
8(b) Nurse practitioners will play an especially important part in
9the implementation of the federal Patient Protection and Affordable
10Care Act, which will bring an estimated five million more
11Californians into the health care delivery
system, because they
12will provide for greater access to primary care services in all areas
13of the state. This is particularly true for patients in medically
14underserved urban and rural communities.
15(c) Due to the excellent safety and efficacy record that nurse
16practitioners have earned, the Institute of Medicine of the National
17Academy of Sciences has recommended full independent practice
18for nurse practitioners. Currently, 17 states allow nurse practitioners
19to practice to the full extent of their training and education with
20independent practice.
21(d) Furthermore, nurse practitioners will assist in addressing
22the primary care provider shortage by removing delays in the
23provision of care that are created when dated regulations require
24a physician’s signature or protocol before a
patient can initiate
P3 1treatment or obtain diagnostic tests that are ordered by a nurse
2practitioner.
Section 2835.5 of the Business and Professions Code
4 is amended to read:
(a) A registered nurse who is holding himself or herself
6out as a nurse practitioner or who desires to hold himself or herself
7out as a nurse practitioner shall, within the time prescribed by the
8board and prior to his or her next license renewal or the issuance
9of an initial license, submit educational, experience, and other
10credentials and information as the board may require for it to
11determine that the person qualifies to use the title “nurse
12practitioner,” pursuant to the standards and qualifications
13established by the board.
14(b) Upon finding that a person is qualified to hold himself or
15herself out as a nurse practitioner, the board shall
appropriately
16indicate on the license issued or renewed, that the person is
17
qualified to use the title “nurse practitioner.” The board shall also
18issue to each qualified person a certificate evidencing that the
19person is qualified to use the title “nurse practitioner.”
20(c) A person who has been found to be qualified by the board
21to use the title “nurse practitioner” prior to January 1, 2005, shall
22not be required to submit any further qualifications or information
23to the board and shall be deemed to have met the requirements of
24this section.
25(d) On and after January 1, 2008, an applicant for initial
26qualification or certification as a nurse practitioner under this article
27who has not been qualified or certified as a nurse practitioner in
28California or any other state shall meet the following requirements:
29(1) Hold a valid and active registered nursing license issued
30under this chapter.
31(2) Possess a master’s degree in nursing, a master’s degree in
32a clinical field related to nursing, or a graduate degree in nursing.
33(3) Satisfactorily complete a nurse practitioner program
34approved by the board.
35(e) On and after July 1, 2016, an applicant for initial
36qualification or certification as a nurse practitioner shall, in
37addition, hold a national certification as a nurse practitioner from
38a national certifying body recognized by the board.
Section 2835.7 of the Business and Professions Code
40 is amended to read:
(a) Notwithstanding any other law, in addition to any
2other practices authorized in statute or regulation, a nurse
3practitioner may do any of the following:
4(1) Order durable medical equipment. Notwithstanding that
5authority, nothing in this paragraph shall operate to limit the ability
6of a third-party payer to require prior approval.
7(2) After performance of a physical examination by the nurse
8practitioner, certify disability pursuant to Section 2708 of the
9Unemployment Insurance Code.
10(3) For individuals receiving home health services or personal
11care
services, approve, sign, modify, or add to a plan of treatment
12or plan of care.
13(4) Assess patients, synthesize and analyze data, and apply
14principles of health care.
15(5) Manage the physical and psychosocial health status of
16patients.
17(6) Analyze multiple sources of data, identify alternative
18possibilities as to the nature of a health care problem, and select,
19implement, and evaluate appropriate treatment.
20(7) begin deleteExamine patients and establish a medical end deletebegin insertEstablish a
21physical end insertdiagnosis by client history,
physical examination, and
22other criteriabegin insert, consistent with this sectionend insert.
23(8) Order, furnish, or prescribe drugs or devices pursuant to
24Section 2836.1.
25(9) Refer patients to other health care providers as provided in
26subdivision (b).
27(10) Delegate tasks to a medical assistant pursuant to
28standardized procedures and protocols developed by the nurse
29practitioner and medical assistant, that are within the medical
30assistant’s scope of practice.
31(11) Perform additional acts that require education and training
32and that are recognized by the nursing profession as proper to be
33performed
by a nurse practitioner.
34(12) Order hospice care as appropriate.
35(13) Perform procedures that are necessary and consistent with
36the nurse practitioner’s scope of practice.
37(b) A nurse practitioner shall refer a patient to a physician or
38another licensed health care provider if the referral will protect the
39health and welfare of the patient, and shall consult with a physician
40or other licensed health care provider if a situation or condition
P5 1begin delete occurs in a patient thatend deletebegin insert of a patientend insert is beyond the nurse
2practitioner’sbegin delete knowledge and experienceend deletebegin insert
education, training, or
3certificationend insert.
4(c) A nurse practitioner shall maintainbegin delete medical malpracticeend delete
5begin insert professional liability end insert insurancebegin insert that is appropriate for his or her
6practice settingend insert.
Section 2836.1 of the Business and Professions Code
8 is amended to read:
(a) Neither this chapter nor any other provision of law
10shall be construed to prohibit a nurse practitioner from furnishing,
11ordering, or prescribing drugs or devices when both of the
12following apply:
13(1) The drugs or devices that are furnished, ordered, or
14prescribed are consistent with the practitioner’s educational
15preparation or for which clinical competency has been established
16and maintained.
17(2) (A) The board has certified in accordance with Section
182836.3 that the nurse practitioner has satisfactorily completed a
19course in pharmacology covering the drugs or devices to be
20furnished, ordered, or
prescribed under this section.
21(B) Nurse practitioners who are certified by the board and hold
22an active furnishing number and who are registered with the United
23States Drug Enforcement Administration, shall complete, as part
24of their continuing education requirements, a course including
25Schedule II controlled substances based on the standards developed
26by the board. The board shall establish the requirements for
27satisfactory completion of this subdivision.
28(b) A nurse practitioner shall not furnish, order, or prescribe a
29dangerous drug, as defined in Section 4022, without an appropriate
30prior examination and a medical indication, unless one of the
31following applies:
32(1) The nurse practitioner was a designated practitioner
serving
33in the absence of the patient’s physician and surgeon, podiatrist,
34or nurse practitioner, as the case may be, and if the drugs were
35
prescribed, dispensed, or furnished only as necessary to maintain
36the patient until the return of his or her practitioner, but in any case
37no longer than 72 hours.
38(2) The nurse practitioner transmitted the order for the drugs to
39a registered nurse or to a licensed vocational nurse in an inpatient
40facility, and if both of the following conditions exist:
P6 1(A) The nurse practitioner had consulted with the registered
2nurse or licensed vocational nurse who had reviewed the patient’s
3records.
4(B) The nurse practitioner was designated as the practitioner to
5serve in the absence of the patient’s physician and surgeon,
6podiatrist, or nurse practitioner, as the case may be.
7(3) The nurse practitioner was a designated practitioner serving
8in the absence of the patient’s physician and surgeon, podiatrist,
9or nurse practitioner, as the case may be, and was in possession
10of or had utilized the patient’s records and ordered the renewal of
11a medically indicated prescription for an amount not exceeding
12the original prescription in strength or amount or for more than
13one refill.
14(4) The licensee was acting in accordance with subdivision (b)
15of Section 120582 of the Health and Safety Code.
16(c) Use of the term “furnishing” in this section, in health
17facilities defined in Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code,
18shall include the ordering of a drug or device.
19(d) “Drug order” or “order” for
purposes of this section means
20an order for medication which is dispensed to or for an ultimate
21user, issued by a nurse practitioner as an individual practitioner,
22within the meaning of Section 1306.02 of Title 21 of the Code of
23Federal Regulations. Notwithstanding any other provision of law,
24
(1) all references to “prescription” in this code and the Health and
25Safety Code shall include drug orders issued by nurse practitioners;
26and (2) the signature of a nurse practitioner on a drug order issued
27in accordance with this section shall be deemed to be the signature
28of a prescriber for purposes of this code and the Health and Safety
29Code.
Section 2836.2 of the Business and Professions Code
31 is amended to read:
All nurse practitioners who are authorized pursuant to
33Section 2836.1 to prescribe, furnish, or issue drug orders for
34controlled substances shall register with the United States Drug
35Enforcement Administration.
Section 2836.3 of the Business and Professions Code
37 is amended to read:
(a) The furnishing of drugs or devices by nurse
39practitioners is conditional on issuance by the board of a number
40to the nurse applicant who has successfully completed the
P7 1requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivisionbegin delete (b)end deletebegin insert (a)end insert of Section
22836.1. The number shall be included on all transmittals of orders
3for drugs or devices by the nurse practitioner. The board shall
4make the list of numbers issued available to thebegin insert California Stateend insert
5 Board of Pharmacy.
The board may charge the applicant a fee to
6cover all necessary costs to implement this section.
7(b) The number shall be renewable at the time of the applicant’s
8registered nurse license renewal.
9(c) The board may revoke, suspend, or deny issuance of the
10numbers for incompetence or gross negligence in the performance
11of functions specified in Sections 2836.1 and 2836.2.
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