California 2017-2018 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB2221 Compare Versions

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1-Assembly Bill No. 2221 CHAPTER 490An act to amend Sections 2570.2, 2570.3, 2570.6, 2570.7, 2570.10, 2570.14, 2570.18, 2570.185, 2570.20, 2570.28, 2570.29, and 2571 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to healing arts. [ Approved by Governor September 18, 2018. Filed with Secretary of State September 18, 2018. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2221, Bloom. Occupational therapy.Existing law, the Occupational Therapy Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of the practice of occupational therapy by the California Board of Occupational Therapy. Existing law defines the practice of occupational therapy and specifies that occupational therapy services encompass occupation therapy, assessment, treatment, education, and consultation with individuals referred for those services after diagnosis of a disease or disorder. Existing law prohibits a person from practicing occupational therapy without being licensed under the act and makes a violation of that prohibition a crime. This bill would instead define occupational therapy for purposes of the act, and would make conforming changes. The bill would also eliminate the reference to a referral after diagnosis in the description of occupational therapy services. By expanding the scope of a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. Existing law defines the term occupational therapist and specifies that only the occupational therapist is responsible for the occupational therapy assessment of a client and the development of an occupational therapy plan of treatment.This bill would instead specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.Existing law specifies that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice, among other things, physical therapy or psychology, as those terms are defined under specified law.This bill would additionally specify that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice marriage and family therapy, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Act, professional clinical counseling, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor Act, clinical social work, as that term is defined for purposes of the Clinical Social Worker Practice Act, or educational psychology, as that term is defined for purposes of the Educational Psychologist Practice Act.Existing law requires the occupational therapy board to ensure proper supervision of occupational therapy assistants and aides and allows an occupational therapist to supervise no more than 2 occupational therapy assistants at any one time. Existing law provides for aides to be supervised by occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants and defines the term aide for purposes of the act to mean an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist.This bill would increase the number of occupational therapy assistants an occupational therapist may supervise to 3. This bill would also revise the definition of aide to conform to the authority for an aide to also be supervised by an occupational therapy assistant. The bill would specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.Existing law requires an occupational therapist providing hand therapy services or using physical agent modalities to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed post professional education and training in specified areas.This bill would eliminate the post professional limitation.Existing law requires an applicant for an occupational therapist license to, among other things, complete a specified educational program and pass a specified examination. Existing law requires the board to approve the examinations for licensure and also authorizes the board to adopt rules relating to professional conduct to carry out the purposes of the act. Existing law requires the curriculum for an educational program for occupational therapists to contain the content required or approved by specified organizations, and specifies a list of subjects that must be included in the program.This bill would delete that list of subjects. The bill would also authorize, rather than require, the board to approve licensure examinations and would authorize the board to adopt rules necessary to effectuate the purpose of the act.Existing law authorizes the board to establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competency requirements as a condition of renewal of a license.The bill would instead require the board to do so, and would authorize only a portion of continuing competence requirements to be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed in the context of a broader professional development plan. The bill would also provide a definition for the term continuing competence.Existing law prohibits a person from using specified professional abbreviations and terms intended to represent that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy unless the person is licensed to practice as an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant.This bill would revise the list of abbreviations and terms that may not be used without a license. This bill would provide that an occupational therapist, or an occupational therapy assistant, that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed.The bill would replace references to patient with client throughout the act and would enact other related provisions. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 2570.2 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:(a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.(b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.(c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.(d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.(e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession. (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.(g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.(h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.(i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.(j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.(k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation. (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.(m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.(n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.SEC. 2. Section 2570.3 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.(b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.(c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.(d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:(1) Hand therapy.(2) The use of physical agent modalities.(3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.(e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.(2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.(3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.(4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.(5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.(6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.(f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.(2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.(3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.(4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.(5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.(6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.(7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.(g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.(h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.(i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.(j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.(1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.(2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.(k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.SEC. 3. Section 2570.6 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:(a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).(2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).(d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.(e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.(f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.SEC. 4. Section 2570.7 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.(b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.(c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.SEC. 5. Section 2570.10 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.(b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.SEC. 6. Section 2570.14 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:(a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.(b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.SEC. 7. Section 2570.18 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.(b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.(c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:(1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.(2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.(3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.(d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.(e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).(f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.(g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.(h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.(i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.SEC. 8. Section 2570.185 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.(b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.(c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.(d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.SEC. 9. Section 2570.20 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.(b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.(c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.SEC. 10. Section 2570.28 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:(a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.(5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.(c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.(d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.(e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.(g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.(h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.(i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.(k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.(l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.(m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.(n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.(o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.(1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.(2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.SEC. 11. Section 2570.29 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:(a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:(1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.(2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(3) Alcoholic beverages.(c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.(d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.(e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.SEC. 12. Section 2571 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.(b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.SEC. 13. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
1+Enrolled September 04, 2018 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2018 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 20, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 14, 2018 Amended IN Senate July 02, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 11, 2018 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2018 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2221Introduced by Assembly Member BloomFebruary 12, 2018An act to amend Sections 2570.2, 2570.3, 2570.6, 2570.7, 2570.10, 2570.14, 2570.18, 2570.185, 2570.20, 2570.28, 2570.29, and 2571 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to healing arts.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2221, Bloom. Occupational therapy.Existing law, the Occupational Therapy Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of the practice of occupational therapy by the California Board of Occupational Therapy. Existing law defines the practice of occupational therapy and specifies that occupational therapy services encompass occupation therapy, assessment, treatment, education, and consultation with individuals referred for those services after diagnosis of a disease or disorder. Existing law prohibits a person from practicing occupational therapy without being licensed under the act and makes a violation of that prohibition a crime. This bill would instead define occupational therapy for purposes of the act, and would make conforming changes. The bill would also eliminate the reference to a referral after diagnosis in the description of occupational therapy services. By expanding the scope of a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. Existing law defines the term occupational therapist and specifies that only the occupational therapist is responsible for the occupational therapy assessment of a client and the development of an occupational therapy plan of treatment.This bill would instead specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.Existing law specifies that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice, among other things, physical therapy or psychology, as those terms are defined under specified law.This bill would additionally specify that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice marriage and family therapy, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Act, professional clinical counseling, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor Act, clinical social work, as that term is defined for purposes of the Clinical Social Worker Practice Act, or educational psychology, as that term is defined for purposes of the Educational Psychologist Practice Act.Existing law requires the occupational therapy board to ensure proper supervision of occupational therapy assistants and aides and allows an occupational therapist to supervise no more than 2 occupational therapy assistants at any one time. Existing law provides for aides to be supervised by occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants and defines the term aide for purposes of the act to mean an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist.This bill would increase the number of occupational therapy assistants an occupational therapist may supervise to 3. This bill would also revise the definition of aide to conform to the authority for an aide to also be supervised by an occupational therapy assistant. The bill would specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.Existing law requires an occupational therapist providing hand therapy services or using physical agent modalities to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed post professional education and training in specified areas.This bill would eliminate the post professional limitation.Existing law requires an applicant for an occupational therapist license to, among other things, complete a specified educational program and pass a specified examination. Existing law requires the board to approve the examinations for licensure and also authorizes the board to adopt rules relating to professional conduct to carry out the purposes of the act. Existing law requires the curriculum for an educational program for occupational therapists to contain the content required or approved by specified organizations, and specifies a list of subjects that must be included in the program.This bill would delete that list of subjects. The bill would also authorize, rather than require, the board to approve licensure examinations and would authorize the board to adopt rules necessary to effectuate the purpose of the act.Existing law authorizes the board to establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competency requirements as a condition of renewal of a license.The bill would instead require the board to do so, and would authorize only a portion of continuing competence requirements to be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed in the context of a broader professional development plan. The bill would also provide a definition for the term continuing competence.Existing law prohibits a person from using specified professional abbreviations and terms intended to represent that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy unless the person is licensed to practice as an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant.This bill would revise the list of abbreviations and terms that may not be used without a license. This bill would provide that an occupational therapist, or an occupational therapy assistant, that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed.The bill would replace references to patient with client throughout the act and would enact other related provisions. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 2570.2 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:(a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.(b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.(c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.(d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.(e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession. (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.(g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.(h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.(i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.(j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.(k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation. (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.(m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.(n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.SEC. 2. Section 2570.3 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.(b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.(c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.(d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:(1) Hand therapy.(2) The use of physical agent modalities.(3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.(e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.(2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.(3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.(4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.(5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.(6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.(f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.(2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.(3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.(4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.(5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.(6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.(7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.(g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.(h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.(i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.(j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.(1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.(2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.(k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.SEC. 3. Section 2570.6 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:(a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).(2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).(d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.(e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.(f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.SEC. 4. Section 2570.7 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.(b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.(c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.SEC. 5. Section 2570.10 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.(b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.SEC. 6. Section 2570.14 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:(a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.(b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.SEC. 7. Section 2570.18 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.(b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.(c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:(1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.(2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.(3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.(d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.(e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).(f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.(g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.(h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.(i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.SEC. 8. Section 2570.185 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.(b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.(c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.(d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.SEC. 9. Section 2570.20 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.(b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.(c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.SEC. 10. Section 2570.28 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:(a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.(5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.(c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.(d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.(e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.(g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.(h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.(i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.(k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.(l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.(m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.(n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.(o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.(1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.(2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.SEC. 11. Section 2570.29 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:(a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:(1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.(2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(3) Alcoholic beverages.(c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.(d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.(e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.SEC. 12. Section 2571 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.(b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.SEC. 13. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
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3- Assembly Bill No. 2221 CHAPTER 490An act to amend Sections 2570.2, 2570.3, 2570.6, 2570.7, 2570.10, 2570.14, 2570.18, 2570.185, 2570.20, 2570.28, 2570.29, and 2571 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to healing arts. [ Approved by Governor September 18, 2018. Filed with Secretary of State September 18, 2018. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2221, Bloom. Occupational therapy.Existing law, the Occupational Therapy Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of the practice of occupational therapy by the California Board of Occupational Therapy. Existing law defines the practice of occupational therapy and specifies that occupational therapy services encompass occupation therapy, assessment, treatment, education, and consultation with individuals referred for those services after diagnosis of a disease or disorder. Existing law prohibits a person from practicing occupational therapy without being licensed under the act and makes a violation of that prohibition a crime. This bill would instead define occupational therapy for purposes of the act, and would make conforming changes. The bill would also eliminate the reference to a referral after diagnosis in the description of occupational therapy services. By expanding the scope of a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. Existing law defines the term occupational therapist and specifies that only the occupational therapist is responsible for the occupational therapy assessment of a client and the development of an occupational therapy plan of treatment.This bill would instead specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.Existing law specifies that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice, among other things, physical therapy or psychology, as those terms are defined under specified law.This bill would additionally specify that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice marriage and family therapy, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Act, professional clinical counseling, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor Act, clinical social work, as that term is defined for purposes of the Clinical Social Worker Practice Act, or educational psychology, as that term is defined for purposes of the Educational Psychologist Practice Act.Existing law requires the occupational therapy board to ensure proper supervision of occupational therapy assistants and aides and allows an occupational therapist to supervise no more than 2 occupational therapy assistants at any one time. Existing law provides for aides to be supervised by occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants and defines the term aide for purposes of the act to mean an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist.This bill would increase the number of occupational therapy assistants an occupational therapist may supervise to 3. This bill would also revise the definition of aide to conform to the authority for an aide to also be supervised by an occupational therapy assistant. The bill would specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.Existing law requires an occupational therapist providing hand therapy services or using physical agent modalities to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed post professional education and training in specified areas.This bill would eliminate the post professional limitation.Existing law requires an applicant for an occupational therapist license to, among other things, complete a specified educational program and pass a specified examination. Existing law requires the board to approve the examinations for licensure and also authorizes the board to adopt rules relating to professional conduct to carry out the purposes of the act. Existing law requires the curriculum for an educational program for occupational therapists to contain the content required or approved by specified organizations, and specifies a list of subjects that must be included in the program.This bill would delete that list of subjects. The bill would also authorize, rather than require, the board to approve licensure examinations and would authorize the board to adopt rules necessary to effectuate the purpose of the act.Existing law authorizes the board to establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competency requirements as a condition of renewal of a license.The bill would instead require the board to do so, and would authorize only a portion of continuing competence requirements to be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed in the context of a broader professional development plan. The bill would also provide a definition for the term continuing competence.Existing law prohibits a person from using specified professional abbreviations and terms intended to represent that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy unless the person is licensed to practice as an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant.This bill would revise the list of abbreviations and terms that may not be used without a license. This bill would provide that an occupational therapist, or an occupational therapy assistant, that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed.The bill would replace references to patient with client throughout the act and would enact other related provisions. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Enrolled September 04, 2018 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2018 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 20, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 14, 2018 Amended IN Senate July 02, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 11, 2018 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2018 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2018 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 2221Introduced by Assembly Member BloomFebruary 12, 2018An act to amend Sections 2570.2, 2570.3, 2570.6, 2570.7, 2570.10, 2570.14, 2570.18, 2570.185, 2570.20, 2570.28, 2570.29, and 2571 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to healing arts.LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 2221, Bloom. Occupational therapy.Existing law, the Occupational Therapy Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of the practice of occupational therapy by the California Board of Occupational Therapy. Existing law defines the practice of occupational therapy and specifies that occupational therapy services encompass occupation therapy, assessment, treatment, education, and consultation with individuals referred for those services after diagnosis of a disease or disorder. Existing law prohibits a person from practicing occupational therapy without being licensed under the act and makes a violation of that prohibition a crime. This bill would instead define occupational therapy for purposes of the act, and would make conforming changes. The bill would also eliminate the reference to a referral after diagnosis in the description of occupational therapy services. By expanding the scope of a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. Existing law defines the term occupational therapist and specifies that only the occupational therapist is responsible for the occupational therapy assessment of a client and the development of an occupational therapy plan of treatment.This bill would instead specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.Existing law specifies that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice, among other things, physical therapy or psychology, as those terms are defined under specified law.This bill would additionally specify that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice marriage and family therapy, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Act, professional clinical counseling, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor Act, clinical social work, as that term is defined for purposes of the Clinical Social Worker Practice Act, or educational psychology, as that term is defined for purposes of the Educational Psychologist Practice Act.Existing law requires the occupational therapy board to ensure proper supervision of occupational therapy assistants and aides and allows an occupational therapist to supervise no more than 2 occupational therapy assistants at any one time. Existing law provides for aides to be supervised by occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants and defines the term aide for purposes of the act to mean an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist.This bill would increase the number of occupational therapy assistants an occupational therapist may supervise to 3. This bill would also revise the definition of aide to conform to the authority for an aide to also be supervised by an occupational therapy assistant. The bill would specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.Existing law requires an occupational therapist providing hand therapy services or using physical agent modalities to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed post professional education and training in specified areas.This bill would eliminate the post professional limitation.Existing law requires an applicant for an occupational therapist license to, among other things, complete a specified educational program and pass a specified examination. Existing law requires the board to approve the examinations for licensure and also authorizes the board to adopt rules relating to professional conduct to carry out the purposes of the act. Existing law requires the curriculum for an educational program for occupational therapists to contain the content required or approved by specified organizations, and specifies a list of subjects that must be included in the program.This bill would delete that list of subjects. The bill would also authorize, rather than require, the board to approve licensure examinations and would authorize the board to adopt rules necessary to effectuate the purpose of the act.Existing law authorizes the board to establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competency requirements as a condition of renewal of a license.The bill would instead require the board to do so, and would authorize only a portion of continuing competence requirements to be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed in the context of a broader professional development plan. The bill would also provide a definition for the term continuing competence.Existing law prohibits a person from using specified professional abbreviations and terms intended to represent that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy unless the person is licensed to practice as an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant.This bill would revise the list of abbreviations and terms that may not be used without a license. This bill would provide that an occupational therapist, or an occupational therapy assistant, that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed.The bill would replace references to patient with client throughout the act and would enact other related provisions. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
4+
5+ Enrolled September 04, 2018 Passed IN Senate August 29, 2018 Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 20, 2018 Amended IN Senate August 14, 2018 Amended IN Senate July 02, 2018 Amended IN Senate June 11, 2018 Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2018 Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2018
6+
7+Enrolled September 04, 2018
8+Passed IN Senate August 29, 2018
9+Passed IN Assembly August 30, 2018
10+Amended IN Senate August 24, 2018
11+Amended IN Senate August 20, 2018
12+Amended IN Senate August 14, 2018
13+Amended IN Senate July 02, 2018
14+Amended IN Senate June 11, 2018
15+Amended IN Assembly April 05, 2018
16+Amended IN Assembly March 23, 2018
17+
18+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20172018 REGULAR SESSION
419
520 Assembly Bill No. 2221
6-CHAPTER 490
21+
22+Introduced by Assembly Member BloomFebruary 12, 2018
23+
24+Introduced by Assembly Member Bloom
25+February 12, 2018
726
827 An act to amend Sections 2570.2, 2570.3, 2570.6, 2570.7, 2570.10, 2570.14, 2570.18, 2570.185, 2570.20, 2570.28, 2570.29, and 2571 of the Business and Professions Code, relating to healing arts.
9-
10- [ Approved by Governor September 18, 2018. Filed with Secretary of State September 18, 2018. ]
1128
1229 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1330
1431 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1532
1633 AB 2221, Bloom. Occupational therapy.
1734
1835 Existing law, the Occupational Therapy Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of the practice of occupational therapy by the California Board of Occupational Therapy. Existing law defines the practice of occupational therapy and specifies that occupational therapy services encompass occupation therapy, assessment, treatment, education, and consultation with individuals referred for those services after diagnosis of a disease or disorder. Existing law prohibits a person from practicing occupational therapy without being licensed under the act and makes a violation of that prohibition a crime. This bill would instead define occupational therapy for purposes of the act, and would make conforming changes. The bill would also eliminate the reference to a referral after diagnosis in the description of occupational therapy services. By expanding the scope of a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. Existing law defines the term occupational therapist and specifies that only the occupational therapist is responsible for the occupational therapy assessment of a client and the development of an occupational therapy plan of treatment.This bill would instead specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.Existing law specifies that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice, among other things, physical therapy or psychology, as those terms are defined under specified law.This bill would additionally specify that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice marriage and family therapy, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Act, professional clinical counseling, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor Act, clinical social work, as that term is defined for purposes of the Clinical Social Worker Practice Act, or educational psychology, as that term is defined for purposes of the Educational Psychologist Practice Act.Existing law requires the occupational therapy board to ensure proper supervision of occupational therapy assistants and aides and allows an occupational therapist to supervise no more than 2 occupational therapy assistants at any one time. Existing law provides for aides to be supervised by occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants and defines the term aide for purposes of the act to mean an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist.This bill would increase the number of occupational therapy assistants an occupational therapist may supervise to 3. This bill would also revise the definition of aide to conform to the authority for an aide to also be supervised by an occupational therapy assistant. The bill would specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.Existing law requires an occupational therapist providing hand therapy services or using physical agent modalities to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed post professional education and training in specified areas.This bill would eliminate the post professional limitation.Existing law requires an applicant for an occupational therapist license to, among other things, complete a specified educational program and pass a specified examination. Existing law requires the board to approve the examinations for licensure and also authorizes the board to adopt rules relating to professional conduct to carry out the purposes of the act. Existing law requires the curriculum for an educational program for occupational therapists to contain the content required or approved by specified organizations, and specifies a list of subjects that must be included in the program.This bill would delete that list of subjects. The bill would also authorize, rather than require, the board to approve licensure examinations and would authorize the board to adopt rules necessary to effectuate the purpose of the act.Existing law authorizes the board to establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competency requirements as a condition of renewal of a license.The bill would instead require the board to do so, and would authorize only a portion of continuing competence requirements to be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed in the context of a broader professional development plan. The bill would also provide a definition for the term continuing competence.Existing law prohibits a person from using specified professional abbreviations and terms intended to represent that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy unless the person is licensed to practice as an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant.This bill would revise the list of abbreviations and terms that may not be used without a license. This bill would provide that an occupational therapist, or an occupational therapy assistant, that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed.The bill would replace references to patient with client throughout the act and would enact other related provisions. The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
1936
2037 Existing law, the Occupational Therapy Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of the practice of occupational therapy by the California Board of Occupational Therapy. Existing law defines the practice of occupational therapy and specifies that occupational therapy services encompass occupation therapy, assessment, treatment, education, and consultation with individuals referred for those services after diagnosis of a disease or disorder. Existing law prohibits a person from practicing occupational therapy without being licensed under the act and makes a violation of that prohibition a crime.
2138
2239 This bill would instead define occupational therapy for purposes of the act, and would make conforming changes. The bill would also eliminate the reference to a referral after diagnosis in the description of occupational therapy services. By expanding the scope of a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.
2340
2441 Existing law defines the term occupational therapist and specifies that only the occupational therapist is responsible for the occupational therapy assessment of a client and the development of an occupational therapy plan of treatment.
2542
2643 This bill would instead specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.
2744
2845 Existing law specifies that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice, among other things, physical therapy or psychology, as those terms are defined under specified law.
2946
3047 This bill would additionally specify that the Occupational Therapy Act does not authorize an occupational therapist to practice marriage and family therapy, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Act, professional clinical counseling, as that term is defined for purposes of the Licensed Professional Clinical Counselor Act, clinical social work, as that term is defined for purposes of the Clinical Social Worker Practice Act, or educational psychology, as that term is defined for purposes of the Educational Psychologist Practice Act.
3148
3249 Existing law requires the occupational therapy board to ensure proper supervision of occupational therapy assistants and aides and allows an occupational therapist to supervise no more than 2 occupational therapy assistants at any one time. Existing law provides for aides to be supervised by occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants and defines the term aide for purposes of the act to mean an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist.
3350
3451 This bill would increase the number of occupational therapy assistants an occupational therapist may supervise to 3. This bill would also revise the definition of aide to conform to the authority for an aide to also be supervised by an occupational therapy assistant. The bill would specify that the occupational therapist is responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.
3552
3653 Existing law requires an occupational therapist providing hand therapy services or using physical agent modalities to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed post professional education and training in specified areas.
3754
3855 This bill would eliminate the post professional limitation.
3956
4057 Existing law requires an applicant for an occupational therapist license to, among other things, complete a specified educational program and pass a specified examination. Existing law requires the board to approve the examinations for licensure and also authorizes the board to adopt rules relating to professional conduct to carry out the purposes of the act. Existing law requires the curriculum for an educational program for occupational therapists to contain the content required or approved by specified organizations, and specifies a list of subjects that must be included in the program.
4158
4259 This bill would delete that list of subjects. The bill would also authorize, rather than require, the board to approve licensure examinations and would authorize the board to adopt rules necessary to effectuate the purpose of the act.
4360
4461 Existing law authorizes the board to establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competency requirements as a condition of renewal of a license.
4562
4663 The bill would instead require the board to do so, and would authorize only a portion of continuing competence requirements to be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed in the context of a broader professional development plan. The bill would also provide a definition for the term continuing competence.
4764
4865 Existing law prohibits a person from using specified professional abbreviations and terms intended to represent that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy unless the person is licensed to practice as an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant.
4966
5067 This bill would revise the list of abbreviations and terms that may not be used without a license. This bill would provide that an occupational therapist, or an occupational therapy assistant, that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed.
5168
5269 The bill would replace references to patient with client throughout the act and would enact other related provisions.
5370
5471 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
5572
5673 This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
5774
5875 ## Digest Key
5976
6077 ## Bill Text
6178
6279 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Section 2570.2 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:(a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.(b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.(c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.(d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.(e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession. (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.(g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.(h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.(i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.(j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.(k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation. (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.(m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.(n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.SEC. 2. Section 2570.3 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.(b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.(c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.(d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:(1) Hand therapy.(2) The use of physical agent modalities.(3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.(e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.(2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.(3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.(4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.(5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.(6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.(f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.(2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.(3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.(4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.(5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.(6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.(7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.(g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.(h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.(i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.(j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.(1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.(2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.(k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.SEC. 3. Section 2570.6 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:(a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).(2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).(d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.(e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.(f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.SEC. 4. Section 2570.7 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.(b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.(c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.SEC. 5. Section 2570.10 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.(b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.SEC. 6. Section 2570.14 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:(a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.(b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.SEC. 7. Section 2570.18 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.(b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.(c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:(1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.(2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.(3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.(d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.(e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).(f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.(g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.(h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.(i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.SEC. 8. Section 2570.185 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.(b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.(c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.(d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.SEC. 9. Section 2570.20 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.(b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.(c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.SEC. 10. Section 2570.28 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:(a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.(5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.(c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.(d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.(e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.(g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.(h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.(i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.(k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.(l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.(m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.(n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.(o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.(1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.(2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.SEC. 11. Section 2570.29 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:(a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:(1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.(2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(3) Alcoholic beverages.(c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.(d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.(e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.SEC. 12. Section 2571 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.(b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.SEC. 13. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
6380
6481 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6582
6683 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6784
6885 SECTION 1. Section 2570.2 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:(a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.(b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.(c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.(d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.(e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession. (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.(g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.(h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.(i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.(j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.(k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation. (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.(m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.(n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.
6986
7087 SECTION 1. Section 2570.2 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
7188
7289 ### SECTION 1.
7390
7491 2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:(a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.(b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.(c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.(d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.(e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession. (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.(g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.(h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.(i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.(j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.(k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation. (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.(m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.(n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.
7592
7693 2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:(a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.(b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.(c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.(d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.(e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession. (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.(g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.(h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.(i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.(j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.(k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation. (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.(m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.(n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.
7794
7895 2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:(a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.(b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.(c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.(d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.(e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession. (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.(g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.(h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.(i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.(j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.(k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation. (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.(m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.(n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.
7996
8097
8198
8299 2570.2. As used in this chapter, unless the context requires otherwise:
83100
84101 (a) Appropriate supervision of an aide means that the responsible occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant shall provide direct in-sight supervision when the aide is providing delegated client-related tasks and shall be readily available at all times to provide advice or instruction to the aide. The occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant is responsible for documenting the clients record concerning the delegated client-related tasks performed by the aide.
85102
86103 (b) Aide means an individual who provides supportive services to an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant and who is trained by an occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant to perform, under appropriate supervision, delegated, selected client and nonclient-related tasks for which the aide has demonstrated competency. An occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant licensed pursuant to this chapter may utilize the services of one aide engaged in client-related tasks to assist the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant in the practice of occupational therapy. The occupational therapist shall be responsible for the overall use and actions of the aide.
87104
88105 (c) Association means the Occupational Therapy Association of California or a similarly constituted organization representing occupational therapists in this state.
89106
90107 (d) Board means the California Board of Occupational Therapy.
91108
92109 (e) Continuing competence means a dynamic and multidimensional process in which the occupational therapist or occupational therapy assistant develops and maintains the knowledge, performance skills, interpersonal abilities, critical reasoning, and ethical reasoning skills necessary to perform current and future roles and responsibilities within the profession.
93110
94111 (f) Examination means an entry level examination for occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy or by another nationally recognized credentialing body.
95112
96113 (g) Good standing means that the person has a current, valid license to practice occupational therapy or assist in the practice of occupational therapy and has not been disciplined by the recognized professional licensing or standard-setting body within five years prior to application or renewal of the persons license.
97114
98115 (h) Occupational therapist means an individual who meets the minimum education requirements specified in Section 2570.6 and is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter and whose license is in good standing as determined by the board to practice occupational therapy under this chapter. The occupational therapist is responsible for and directs the evaluation process and develops the intervention plan.
99116
100117 (i) Occupational therapy assistant means an individual who is licensed pursuant to the provisions of this chapter, who is in good standing as determined by the board, and based thereon, who is qualified to assist in the practice of occupational therapy under this chapter, and who works under the appropriate supervision of a licensed occupational therapist.
101118
102119 (j) Occupational therapy services means the services of an occupational therapist or the services of an occupational therapy assistant under the appropriate supervision of an occupational therapist.
103120
104121 (k) Person means an individual, partnership, unincorporated organization, or corporation.
105122
106123 (l) Occupational therapy means the therapeutic use of purposeful and meaningful goal-directed activities (occupations) with individuals, groups, populations, or organizations, to support participation, performance, and function in roles and situations in home, school, workplace, community, and other settings. Occupational therapy services are provided for habilitation, rehabilitation, and the promotion of health and wellness for clients with disability- and nondisability-related needs or to those who have, or are at risk of developing, health conditions that limit activity or cause participation restrictions. Occupational therapy services encompass occupational therapy assessment, treatment, education, and consultation. Occupational therapy addresses the physical, cognitive, psychosocial, sensory-perception and other aspects of performance in a variety of contexts and environments to support engagement in occupations that affect physical and mental health, well-being, and quality of life. Occupational therapy assessment identifies performance abilities and limitations that are necessary for self-maintenance, learning, work, and other similar meaningful activities. Occupational therapy treatment is focused on developing, improving, or restoring functional daily living skills, compensating for and preventing dysfunction, or minimizing disability. Through engagement in everyday activities, occupational therapy promotes mental health by supporting occupational performance in people with, or at risk of experiencing, a range of physical and mental health disorders. Occupational therapy techniques that are used for treatment involve teaching activities of daily living (excluding speech-language skills); designing or fabricating orthotic devices, and applying or training in the use of assistive technology or orthotic and prosthetic devices (excluding gait training). Occupational therapy consultation provides expert advice to enhance function and quality of life. Consultation or treatment may involve modification of tasks or environments to allow an individual to achieve maximum independence. Services are provided individually, in groups, or populations.
107124
108125 (m) Hand therapy is the art and science of rehabilitation of the hand, wrist, and forearm requiring comprehensive knowledge of the upper extremity and specialized skills in assessment and treatment to prevent dysfunction, restore function, or reverse the advancement of pathology. This definition is not intended to prevent an occupational therapist practicing hand therapy from providing other occupational therapy services authorized under this act in conjunction with hand therapy.
109126
110127 (n) Physical agent modalities means techniques that produce a response in soft tissue through the use of light, water, temperature, sound, or electricity. These techniques are used as adjunctive methods in conjunction with, or in immediate preparation for, occupational therapy services.
111128
112129 SEC. 2. Section 2570.3 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.(b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.(c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.(d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:(1) Hand therapy.(2) The use of physical agent modalities.(3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.(e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.(2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.(3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.(4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.(5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.(6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.(f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.(2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.(3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.(4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.(5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.(6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.(7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.(g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.(h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.(i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.(j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.(1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.(2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.(k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.
113130
114131 SEC. 2. Section 2570.3 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
115132
116133 ### SEC. 2.
117134
118135 2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.(b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.(c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.(d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:(1) Hand therapy.(2) The use of physical agent modalities.(3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.(e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.(2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.(3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.(4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.(5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.(6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.(f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.(2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.(3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.(4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.(5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.(6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.(7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.(g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.(h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.(i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.(j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.(1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.(2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.(k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.
119136
120137 2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.(b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.(c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.(d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:(1) Hand therapy.(2) The use of physical agent modalities.(3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.(e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.(2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.(3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.(4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.(5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.(6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.(f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.(2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.(3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.(4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.(5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.(6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.(7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.(g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.(h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.(i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.(j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.(1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.(2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.(k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.
121138
122139 2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.(b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.(c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.(d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:(1) Hand therapy.(2) The use of physical agent modalities.(3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.(e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.(2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.(3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.(4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.(5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.(6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.(f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:(1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.(2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.(3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.(4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.(5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.(6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.(7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.(g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.(h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.(i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.(j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.(1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.(2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.(k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.
123140
124141
125142
126143 2570.3. (a) No person shall practice occupational therapy or hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapist or as being able to practice occupational therapy, or to render occupational therapy services in this state unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapist under the provisions of this chapter. No person shall hold himself or herself out as an occupational therapy assistant or work as an occupational therapy assistant under the supervision of an occupational therapist unless he or she is licensed as an occupational therapy assistant under the provisions of this chapter.
127144
128145 (b) Only an individual may be licensed under this chapter.
129146
130147 (c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to practice physical therapy, as defined in Section 2620; speech-language pathology or audiology, as defined in Section 2530.2; nursing, as defined in Section 2725; psychology, as defined in Section 2903; marriage and family therapy, as defined in Section 4980.02; clinical social work, as defined in Section 4996.9; professional clinical counseling, as defined in Section 4999.20, educational psychology, as defined in Section 4989.14; or spinal manipulation or other forms of healing, except as authorized by this section.
131148
132149 (d) An occupational therapist may provide advanced practices if the therapist has the knowledge, skill, and ability to do so and has demonstrated to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has met educational training and competency requirements. These advanced practices include the following:
133150
134151 (1) Hand therapy.
135152
136153 (2) The use of physical agent modalities.
137154
138155 (3) Swallowing assessment, evaluation, or intervention.
139156
140157 (e) An occupational therapist providing hand therapy services shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:
141158
142159 (1) Anatomy of the upper extremity and how it is altered by pathology.
143160
144161 (2) Histology as it relates to tissue healing and the effects of immobilization and mobilization on connective tissue.
145162
146163 (3) Muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue physiology.
147164
148165 (4) Kinesiology of the upper extremity, such as biomechanical principles of pulleys, intrinsic and extrinsic muscle function, internal forces of muscles, and the effects of external forces.
149166
150167 (5) The effects of temperature and electrical currents on nerve and connective tissue.
151168
152169 (6) Surgical procedures of the upper extremity and their postoperative course.
153170
154171 (f) An occupational therapist using physical agent modalities shall demonstrate to the satisfaction of the board that he or she has completed education and training in all of the following areas:
155172
156173 (1) Anatomy and physiology of muscle, sensory, vascular, and connective tissue in response to the application of physical agent modalities.
157174
158175 (2) Principles of chemistry and physics related to the selected modality.
159176
160177 (3) Physiological, neurophysiological, and electrophysiological changes that occur as a result of the application of a modality.
161178
162179 (4) Guidelines for the preparation of the client, including education about the process and possible outcomes of treatment.
163180
164181 (5) Safety rules and precautions related to the selected modality.
165182
166183 (6) Methods for documenting immediate and long-term effects of treatment.
167184
168185 (7) Characteristics of the equipment, including safe operation, adjustment, indications of malfunction, and care.
169186
170187 (g) An occupational therapist in the process of achieving the education, training, and competency requirements established by the board for providing hand therapy or using physical agent modalities may practice these techniques under the supervision of an occupational therapist who has already met the requirements established by the board, a physical therapist, or a physician and surgeon.
171188
172189 (h) The board shall develop and adopt regulations regarding the educational training and competency requirements for advanced practices in collaboration with the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Physical Therapy Board of California.
173190
174191 (i) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as authorizing an occupational therapist to seek reimbursement for services other than for the practice of occupational therapy as defined in this chapter.
175192
176193 (j) Supervision of an occupational therapy assistant means that the responsible occupational therapist shall at all times be responsible for all occupational therapy services provided to the client. The occupational therapist who is responsible for appropriate supervision shall formulate and document in each clients record, with his or her signature, the goals and plan for that client, and shall make sure that the occupational therapy assistant assigned to that client functions under appropriate supervision. As part of the responsible occupational therapists appropriate supervision, he or she shall conduct at least weekly review and inspection of all aspects of occupational therapy services by the occupational therapy assistant.
177194
178195 (1) The supervising occupational therapist has the continuing responsibility to follow the progress of each client, provide direct care to the client, and to assure that the occupational therapy assistant does not function autonomously.
179196
180197 (2) An occupational therapist shall not supervise more occupational therapy assistants, at any one time, than can be appropriately supervised in the opinion of the board. Three occupational therapy assistants shall be the maximum number of occupational therapy assistants supervised by an occupational therapist at any one time, but the board may permit the supervision of a greater number by an occupational therapist if, in the opinion of the board, there would be adequate supervision and the publics health and safety would be served. In no case shall the total number of occupational therapy assistants exceed twice the number of occupational therapists regularly employed by a facility at any one time.
181198
182199 (k) The amendments to subdivisions (d), (e), (f), and (g) relating to advanced practices, that are made by the act adding this subdivision, shall become operative no later than January 1, 2004, or on the date the board adopts regulations pursuant to subdivision (h), whichever first occurs.
183200
184201 SEC. 3. Section 2570.6 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:(a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).(2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).(d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.(e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.(f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.
185202
186203 SEC. 3. Section 2570.6 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
187204
188205 ### SEC. 3.
189206
190207 2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:(a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).(2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).(d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.(e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.(f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.
191208
192209 2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:(a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).(2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).(d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.(e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.(f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.
193210
194211 2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:(a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.(c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).(2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).(d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.(e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.(f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.
195212
196213
197214
198215 2570.6. An applicant applying for a license as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant shall file with the board a written application provided by the board, showing to the satisfaction of the board that he or she meets all of the following requirements:
199216
200217 (a) That the applicant is in good standing and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.
201218
202219 (b) (1) That the applicant has successfully completed the academic requirements of an educational program for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants that is approved by the board and accredited by the American Occupational Therapy Associations Accreditation Council for Occupational Therapy Education (ACOTE), or accredited or approved by the American Occupational Therapy Associations (AOTA) predecessor organization, or approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.
203220
204221 (2) The curriculum of an educational program for occupational therapists shall contain the content required by the ACOTE accreditation standards, or as approved by AOTAs predecessor organization, or as approved by AOTAs Career Mobility Program.
205222
206223 (c) (1) For an applicant who is a graduate of an occupational therapy or occupational therapy assistant educational program who is unable to provide evidence of having met the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), he or she may demonstrate passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (b).
207224
208225 (2) For an applicant who completed AOTAs Career Mobility Program, he or she shall demonstrate participation in the program and passage of the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association, as evidence of having successfully satisfied the requirements of paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (b).
209226
210227 (d) That the applicant has successfully completed a period of supervised fieldwork experience approved by the board and arranged by a recognized educational institution where he or she met the academic requirements of subdivision (b) or (c) or arranged by a nationally recognized professional association. The fieldwork requirements for applicants applying for licensure as an occupational therapist or certification as an occupational therapy assistant shall be consistent with the requirements of the ACOTE accreditation standards, or AOTAs predecessor organization, or AOTAs Career Mobility Program, that were in effect when the applicant completed his or her educational program.
211228
212229 (e) That the applicant has passed an examination as provided in Section 2570.7.
213230
214231 (f) That the applicant, at the time of application, is a person over 18 years of age, is not addicted to alcohol or any controlled substance, and has not committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for denial of licensure under Section 480.
215232
216233 SEC. 4. Section 2570.7 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.(b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.(c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.
217234
218235 SEC. 4. Section 2570.7 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
219236
220237 ### SEC. 4.
221238
222239 2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.(b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.(c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.
223240
224241 2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.(b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.(c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.
225242
226243 2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.(b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.(c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.
227244
228245
229246
230247 2570.7. (a) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of Section 2570.6 may apply for examination for licensure in a manner prescribed by the board. Subject to the provisions of this chapter, an applicant who fails an examination may apply for reexamination.
231248
232249 (b) Each applicant for licensure shall successfully complete the entry level examination for occupational therapists or occupational therapy assistants, such as the examination administered by the National Board for Certification in Occupational Therapy, the American Occupational Therapy Certification Board, or the American Occupational Therapy Association. The examination shall be appropriately validated. Each applicant shall be examined by written examination to test his or her knowledge of the basic and clinical sciences relating to occupational therapy, occupational therapy techniques and methods, and any other subjects that the board may require to determine the applicants fitness to practice under this chapter.
233250
234251 (c) Applicants for licensure shall be examined at a time and place and under that supervision as the board may require.
235252
236253 SEC. 5. Section 2570.10 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.(b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.
237254
238255 SEC. 5. Section 2570.10 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
239256
240257 ### SEC. 5.
241258
242259 2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.(b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.
243260
244261 2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.(b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.
245262
246263 2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.(b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.
247264
248265
249266
250267 2570.10. (a) Any license issued under this chapter shall be subject to renewal as prescribed by the board and shall expire unless renewed in that manner. The board may provide for the late renewal of a license as provided for in Section 163.5.
251268
252269 (b) In addition to any other qualifications and requirements for licensure renewal, the board shall by rule establish and require the satisfactory completion of continuing competence requirements as a condition of renewal of a license. Only a portion of continuing competence requirements, as determined by the board to protect public health, safety, and welfare, may be fulfilled through competency assessment activities performed within the context of a broader professional development plan.
253270
254271 SEC. 6. Section 2570.14 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:(a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.(b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.
255272
256273 SEC. 6. Section 2570.14 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
257274
258275 ### SEC. 6.
259276
260277 2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:(a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.(b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.
261278
262279 2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:(a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.(b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.
263280
264281 2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:(a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.(b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.
265282
266283
267284
268285 2570.14. An initial applicant who has not been actively engaged in the practice of occupational therapy within the past five years shall provide to the board, in addition to the requirements for licensure under Section 2570.6, any of the following:
269286
270287 (a) Evidence of continued competency as referred to in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.10 for the previous two-year period.
271288
272289 (b) Evidence of having completed the entry-level examination as described in subdivision (b) of Section 2570.7 within the previous two-year period.
273290
274291 SEC. 7. Section 2570.18 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.(b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.(c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:(1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.(2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.(3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.(d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.(e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).(f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.(g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.(h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.(i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.
275292
276293 SEC. 7. Section 2570.18 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
277294
278295 ### SEC. 7.
279296
280297 2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.(b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.(c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:(1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.(2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.(3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.(d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.(e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).(f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.(g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.(h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.(i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.
281298
282299 2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.(b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.(c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:(1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.(2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.(3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.(d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.(e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).(f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.(g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.(h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.(i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.
283300
284301 2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.(b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.(c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:(1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.(2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.(3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.(d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.(e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).(f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.(g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.(h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.(i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.
285302
286303
287304
288305 2570.18. (a) A person shall not represent to the public by title, education, or background, or by description of services, methods, or procedures, or otherwise, that the person is authorized to practice occupational therapy in this state, unless authorized to practice occupational therapy under this chapter.
289306
290307 (b) Unless licensed to practice as an occupational therapist under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T., O.T./L., or O.T.D., Occupational Therapist, Occupational Therapist Licensed, Occupational Therapist Doctorate, or any other words, letters, or symbols with the intent to represent that the person practices or is authorized to practice occupational therapy.
291308
292309 (c) A licensee who has earned a doctoral degree in occupational therapy (OTD) or, after adoption of the regulations described in subdivision (e), a doctoral degree in a related area of practice or study may do the following:
293310
294311 (1) In a written communication, use the initials OTD, DrPH, PhD, or EdD, as applicable, following the licensees name.
295312
296313 (2) In a written communication, use the title Doctor or the abbreviation Dr. preceding the licensees name, if the licensees name is immediately followed by an unabbreviated specification of the applicable doctoral degree held by the licensee.
297314
298315 (3) In a spoken communication while engaged in the practice of occupational therapy, use the title Doctor preceding the licensees name, if the licensee specifies that he or she is an occupational therapy practitioner.
299316
300317 (d) A doctoral degree described in subdivision (c) shall be granted by an institution and program accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges, the Accreditation Council on Occupational Therapy Education, or by an accrediting agency recognized by the National Commission on Accrediting or the United States Department of Education that the board determines is equivalent to the Western Association of Schools and Colleges.
301318
302319 (e) The board shall define, by regulation, the doctoral degrees that are in a related area of practice or study for purposes of subdivision (c).
303320
304321 (f) Unless licensed to assist in the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant under this chapter, a person may not use the professional abbreviations O.T.A., O.T.A/L., or Occupational Therapy Assistant, Licensed Occupational Therapy Assistant, or any other words, letters, or symbols, with the intent to represent that the person assists in, or is authorized to assist in, the practice of occupational therapy as an occupational therapy assistant.
305322
306323 (g) The unauthorized practice or representation as an occupational therapist or as an occupational therapy assistant constitutes an unfair business practice under Section 17200 and false and misleading advertising under Section 17500.
307324
308325 (h) An occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapists in California must be licensed. The licensure requirement also applies to an occupational therapist that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California.
309326
310327 (i) An occupational therapy assistant that is serving as an educator in an education program for occupational therapy assistants in California must be licensed.
311328
312329 SEC. 8. Section 2570.185 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.(b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.(c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.(d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.
313330
314331 SEC. 8. Section 2570.185 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
315332
316333 ### SEC. 8.
317334
318335 2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.(b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.(c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.(d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.
319336
320337 2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.(b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.(c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.(d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.
321338
322339 2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.(b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.(c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.(d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.
323340
324341
325342
326343 2570.185. (a) An occupational therapist shall document his or her evaluation, goals, treatment plan, and summary of treatment in the client record.
327344
328345 (b) An occupational therapy assistant shall document the services provided in the client record.
329346
330347 (c) Occupational therapists and occupational therapy assistants shall document and sign the client record legibly.
331348
332349 (d) Client records shall be maintained for a period of no less than seven years following the discharge of the client, except that the records of unemancipated minors shall be maintained at least one year after the minor has reached the age of 18 years, and not in any case less than seven years.
333350
334351 SEC. 9. Section 2570.20 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.(b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.(c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
335352
336353 SEC. 9. Section 2570.20 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
337354
338355 ### SEC. 9.
339356
340357 2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.(b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.(c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
341358
342359 2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.(b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.(c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
343360
344361 2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.(b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.(c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
345362
346363
347364
348365 2570.20. (a) The board shall administer, coordinate, and enforce the provisions of this chapter, evaluate the qualifications for licensure, and may approve the examinations for licensure under this chapter.
349366
350367 (b) The board shall adopt rules in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act necessary to effectuate the purpose of this chapter for persons holding a license to practice occupational therapy or to assist in the practice of occupational therapy in this state.
351368
352369 (c) Proceedings under this chapter shall be conducted in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code.
353370
354371 SEC. 10. Section 2570.28 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:(a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.(5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.(c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.(d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.(e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.(g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.(h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.(i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.(k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.(l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.(m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.(n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.(o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.(1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.(2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.
355372
356373 SEC. 10. Section 2570.28 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
357374
358375 ### SEC. 10.
359376
360377 2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:(a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.(5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.(c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.(d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.(e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.(g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.(h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.(i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.(k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.(l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.(m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.(n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.(o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.(1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.(2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.
361378
362379 2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:(a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.(5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.(c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.(d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.(e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.(g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.(h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.(i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.(k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.(l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.(m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.(n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.(o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.(1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.(2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.
363380
364381 2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:(a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:(1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.(3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.(5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.(c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.(d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.(e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.(g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.(h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.(i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.(j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.(k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.(l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.(m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.(n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.(o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.(p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.(1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.(2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.
365382
366383
367384
368385 2570.28. The board may deny or discipline a licensee for any of the following:
369386
370387 (a) Unprofessional conduct, including, but not limited to, the following:
371388
372389 (1) Incompetence or gross negligence in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.
373390
374391 (2) Repeated similar negligent acts in carrying out usual occupational therapy functions.
375392
376393 (3) A conviction for practicing medicine without a license in violation of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.
377394
378395 (4) The use of advertising relating to occupational therapy that violates Section 17500.
379396
380397 (5) Denial of licensure, revocation, suspension, restriction, or any other disciplinary action against a licensee by another state or territory of the United States, by any other government agency, or by another California health care professional licensing board. A certified copy of the decision, order, or judgment shall be conclusive evidence thereof.
381398
382399 (b) Procuring a license by fraud, misrepresentation, or mistake.
383400
384401 (c) Violating or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting the violation of, or conspiring to violate, any provision or term of this chapter or any regulation adopted pursuant to this chapter.
385402
386403 (d) Making or giving any false statement or information in connection with the application for issuance or renewal of a license.
387404
388405 (e) Conviction of a crime or of any offense substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event the record of the conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.
389406
390407 (f) Impersonating an applicant or acting as proxy for an applicant in any examination required under this chapter for the issuance of a license.
391408
392409 (g) Impersonating a licensed practitioner, or permitting or allowing another unlicensed person to use a license.
393410
394411 (h) Committing any fraudulent, dishonest, or corrupt act that is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee.
395412
396413 (i) Committing any act punishable as a sexually related crime, if that act is substantially related to the qualifications, functions, or duties of a licensee, in which event a certified copy of the record of conviction shall be conclusive evidence thereof.
397414
398415 (j) Using excessive force upon or mistreating or abusing any client. For the purposes of this subdivision, excessive force means force clearly in excess of that which would normally be applied in similar clinical circumstances.
399416
400417 (k) Falsifying or making grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in a client or hospital record or any other record.
401418
402419 (l) Changing the prescription of a physician and surgeon or falsifying verbal or written orders for treatment or a diagnostic regime received, whether or not that action resulted in actual client harm.
403420
404421 (m) Failing to maintain confidentiality of client medical information, except as disclosure is otherwise permitted or required by law.
405422
406423 (n) Delegating to an unlicensed employee or person a service that requires the knowledge, skills, abilities, or judgment of a licensee.
407424
408425 (o) Committing any act that would be grounds for denial of a license under Section 480.
409426
410427 (p) Except for good cause, the knowing failure to protect clients by failing to follow infection control guidelines of the board, thereby risking transmission of infectious diseases from licensee to client, from client to client, or from client to licensee.
411428
412429 (1) In administering this subdivision, the board shall consider referencing the standards, regulations, and guidelines of the State Department of Public Health developed pursuant to Section 1250.11 of the Health and Safety Code and the standards, guidelines, and regulations pursuant to the California Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1973 (Part 1 (commencing with Section 63001) of Division 5 of the Labor Code) for preventing the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B, and other blood-borne pathogens in health care settings. As necessary to encourage appropriate consistency in the implementation of this subdivision, the board shall consult with the Medical Board of California, the Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, and the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.
413430
414431 (2) The board shall seek to ensure that licensees are informed of their responsibility to minimize the risk of transmission of infectious diseases from health care provider to client, from client to client, and from client to health care provider, and are informed of the most recent scientifically recognized safeguards for minimizing the risks of transmission.
415432
416433 SEC. 11. Section 2570.29 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:(a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:(1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.(2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(3) Alcoholic beverages.(c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.(d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.(e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.
417434
418435 SEC. 11. Section 2570.29 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
419436
420437 ### SEC. 11.
421438
422439 2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:(a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:(1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.(2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(3) Alcoholic beverages.(c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.(d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.(e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.
423440
424441 2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:(a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:(1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.(2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(3) Alcoholic beverages.(c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.(d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.(e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.
425442
426443 2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:(a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:(1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.(2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.(3) Alcoholic beverages.(c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.(d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.(e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.
427444
428445
429446
430447 2570.29. In addition to other acts constituting unprofessional conduct within the meaning of this chapter, it is unprofessional conduct for a person licensed under this chapter to do any of the following:
431448
432449 (a) Obtain or possess in violation of law, or prescribe, or, except as directed by a licensed physician and surgeon, dentist, optometrist, or podiatrist, to administer to himself or herself, or furnish or administer to another, any controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code or any dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.
433450
434451 (b) Use to an extent or in a manner dangerous or injurious to himself or herself, to any other person, or to the public, or that impairs his or her ability to conduct with safety to the public the practice authorized by his or her license, of any of the following:
435452
436453 (1) A controlled substance as defined in Division 10 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code.
437454
438455 (2) A dangerous drug or dangerous device as defined in Section 4022.
439456
440457 (3) Alcoholic beverages.
441458
442459 (c) Be convicted of a criminal offense involving the prescription, consumption, or self-administration of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, or the possession of, or falsification of a record pertaining to, the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section, in which event the record of the conviction is conclusive evidence thereof.
443460
444461 (d) Be committed or confined by a court of competent jurisdiction for intemperate use of any of the substances described in subdivisions (a) and (b) of this section, in which event the court order of commitment or confinement is prima facie evidence of the commitment or confinement.
445462
446463 (e) Falsify, or make grossly incorrect, grossly inconsistent, or unintelligible entries in any hospital or client record, or any other record, pertaining to the substances described in subdivision (a) of this section.
447464
448465 SEC. 12. Section 2571 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.(b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.
449466
450467 SEC. 12. Section 2571 of the Business and Professions Code is amended to read:
451468
452469 ### SEC. 12.
453470
454471 2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.(b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.
455472
456473 2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.(b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.
457474
458475 2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.(b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.(c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.
459476
460477
461478
462479 2571. (a) An occupational therapist licensed pursuant to this chapter and approved by the board in the use of physical agent modalities may apply topical medications prescribed by the clients physician and surgeon, certified nurse-midwife pursuant to Section 2746.51, nurse practitioner pursuant to Section 2836.1, or physician assistant pursuant to Section 3502.1, if the licensee complies with regulations adopted by the board pursuant to this section.
463480
464481 (b) The board shall adopt regulations implementing this section, after meeting and conferring with the Medical Board of California, the California State Board of Pharmacy, and the Physical Therapy Board of California, specifying those topical medications applicable to the practice of occupational therapy and protocols for their use.
465482
466483 (c) Nothing in this section shall be construed to authorize an occupational therapist to prescribe medications.
467484
468485 SEC. 13. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
469486
470487 SEC. 13. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
471488
472489 SEC. 13. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
473490
474491 ### SEC. 13.