Texas 2009 - 81st Regular

Texas Senate Bill SB2398 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version Filed 02/01/2025

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                            2009S0707-1 03/13/09
 By: Nelson S.B. No. 2398


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the powers and duties of the Texas Medical Board.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1. Subsection (a), Section 152.002, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a) The board consists of 19 members appointed by the
 governor with the advice and consent of the senate as follows:
 (1) twelve members who are learned and eminent
 physicians licensed in this state for at least five [three] years
 before the appointment, nine of whom must be graduates of a
 reputable medical school or college with a degree of doctor of
 medicine (M.D.) and three of whom must be graduates of a reputable
 medical school or college with a degree of doctor of osteopathic
 medicine (D.O.); and
 (2) seven members who represent the public.
 SECTION 2. Section 152.003, Occupations Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsections (e) and (f) to read
 as follows:
 (b) A person may not be a public member of the board if the
 person or the person's spouse:
 (1) is registered, certified, or licensed by a
 regulatory agency in the field of health care;
 (2) is employed by or participates in the management
 of a business entity or other organization regulated by or
 receiving money from the board;
 (3) owns or controls, directly or indirectly, more
 than a 10 percent interest in a business entity or other
 organization regulated by or receiving money from the board;
 (4) uses or receives a substantial amount of tangible
 goods, services, or money from the board other than compensation or
 reimbursement authorized by law for board membership, attendance,
 or expenses; [or]
 (5) is a provider of health care; or
 (6)  would not be in full compliance with Section
 572.051, Government Code, if the person or the person's spouse were
 an employee of the state.
 (e)  A person may not be a member of the board if the person
 or anyone related to the person within the second degree by
 consanguinity would not be in full compliance with Section 572.051,
 Government Code, if the person were an employee of the state.
 (f)  A person may not be a member of the board participating
 in decision-making about a license holder if the person or anyone
 related to the person within the second degree by consanguinity
 receives compensation amounting to more than one percent of the
 person's overall income from an entity, other than a medical
 practice, that has a financial interest in common with or adverse to
 the license holder under review by the board, including
 compensation by an insurance company, health care regulatory
 agency, pharmaceutical company, or medical malpractice attorney.
 SECTION 3. Subchapter A, Chapter 152, Occupations Code, is
 amended by adding Section 152.011 to read as follows:
 Sec. 152.011.  PUBLIC TESTIMONY. (a)  The board shall
 convene at least twice a year, on days other than its regularly
 scheduled board meetings, in order to receive public testimony
 about board conduct.
 SECTION 4. Subsection (a), Section 152.051, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a) The board shall appoint an executive director, who may
 serve only while the person is a physician licensed in good standing
 in this state. The executive director serves as the chief executive
 and administrative officer of the board.
 SECTION 5. Subsection (a), Section 154.002, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a) The board shall prepare:
 (1) an alphabetical list of the names of the license
 holders;
 (2) an alphabetical list of the names of the license
 holders by the county in which the license holder's principal place
 of practice is located;
 (3) a summary of the board's functions;
 (4) a copy of this subtitle and a list of other laws
 relating to the practice of medicine;
 (5) a copy of the board's rules;
 (6) a statistical report each fiscal year to the
 legislature and the public that provides aggregate information
 about all complaints received by the board categorized by type of
 complaint, including administrative, quality of care, medical
 error, substance abuse, other criminal behavior, and the
 disposition of those complaints by category; [and]
 (7) a list of the names of all persons who served on an
 informal settlement conference panel during the preceding year and
 the number of informal settlement conference panels on which each
 person served; and
 (8) other information considered appropriate by the
 board.
 SECTION 6. Section 154.051, Occupations Code, is amended by
 amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsections (d) and (e) to read
 as follows:
 (c) A person, including a person acting on behalf of a
 partnership, association, corporation, or other entity, may file a
 complaint against a license holder with the board by swearing under
 oath to the truth of the statements in the complaint.  If the person
 filing the complaint is not a patient, then that person must report
 the person's employment status and the business for whom the person
 works. The board may file a complaint on its own initiative based
 only on good cause.
 (d)  The board may not consider or act on a complaint
 involving care provided more than four years before the date the
 complaint is filed.
 (e)  Notwithstanding any other law, a person may not receive
 civil, criminal, or regulatory immunity as a result of filing a
 complaint if the complaint is filed with malice or with an
 anticompetitive purpose.
 SECTION 7. Subsection (a), Section 154.053, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a) The board shall notify by personal delivery or certified
 mail a physician who is the subject of a complaint filed with the
 board that a complaint has been filed and shall provide [notify] the
 physician notice [of the nature] of the complaint in plain language
 with sufficient detail to formulate a response to the allegations
 made in the complaint. If the physician believes the board has not
 provided sufficient information, then the physician may request
 that the board make a good faith effort to provide additional
 information or respond in writing why the board will not provide
 additional information [unless the notice would jeopardize an
 investigation].
 SECTION 8. Section 154.056, Occupations Code, is amended by
 amending Subsections (a), (b), and (e) and adding Subsection (e-1)
 to read as follows:
 (a) The board shall adopt rules concerning the
 investigation and review of a complaint filed with the board. The
 rules adopted under this section must:
 (1) distinguish among categories of complaints and
 give priority to complaints that involve sexual misconduct, quality
 of care, and impaired physician issues;
 (2) ensure that a complaint is not dismissed without
 appropriate consideration;
 (3) require that the board be advised of the dismissal
 of a complaint and that a letter be sent to the person who filed the
 complaint and to the physician who was the subject of the complaint
 explaining the action taken on the complaint;
 (4) ensure that a person who files a complaint has an
 opportunity to explain the allegations made in the complaint;
 (5) ensure that a physician who is the subject of a
 complaint has at least 30 days after receiving a copy of the
 complaint as provided by Section 154.053(a) to prepare and submit a
 response;
 (6) prescribe guidelines concerning the categories of
 complaints that require the use of a private investigator and the
 procedures for the board to obtain the services of a private
 investigator;
 (7) [(6)] provide for an expert physician panel
 authorized under Subsection (e) to assist with complaints and
 investigations relating to medical competency; and
 (8) [(7)] require the review of reports filed with the
 National Practitioner Data Bank for any report of the termination,
 limitation, suspension, limitation in scope of practice, or
 probation of clinical or hospital staff privileges of a physician
 by:
 (A) a hospital;
 (B) a health maintenance organization;
 (C) an independent practice association;
 (D) an approved nonprofit health corporation
 certified under Section 162.001; or
 (E) a physician network.
 (b) The board shall:
 (1) dispose of each complaint in a timely manner; and
 (2) establish a schedule for conducting each phase of
 a complaint that is under the control of the board not later than
 the 30th day after the date the physician's time for preparing and
 submitting a response expires [board receives the complaint].
 (e) The board by rule shall provide for an expert physician
 panel appointed by the board to assist with complaints and
 investigations relating to medical competency by acting as expert
 physician reviewers. Each member of the expert physician panel
 must be actively practicing [licensed to practice] medicine in this
 state. The rules adopted under this subsection must include
 provisions governing the composition of the panel, qualifications
 for membership on the panel, length of time a member may serve on
 the panel, grounds for removal from the panel, the avoidance of
 conflicts of interest, including situations in which the affected
 physician and the panel member live or work in the same geographical
 area or are competitors, and the duties to be performed by the
 panel. The board's rules governing grounds for removal from the
 panel must include providing for the removal of a panel member who
 is repeatedly delinquent in reviewing complaints and in submitting
 reports to the board. The board's rules governing appointment of
 expert physician panel members to act as expert physician reviewers
 must include a requirement that the board randomly select, to the
 extent permitted by Section 154.058(b) and the conflict of interest
 provisions adopted under this subsection, panel members to review a
 complaint.
 (e-1)  At the request of the physician who is the subject of
 the complaint, the board shall review a report concerning a
 physician's medical competency prepared by an expert physician
 reviewer.
 SECTION 9. Section 154.0561, Occupations Code, is amended
 by amending Subsections (b) and (c) and adding Subsection (e) to
 read as follows:
 (b) A second expert physician reviewer shall independently
 review [the first physician's preliminary report and other]
 information associated with the complaint. The review by the
 second expert shall be independent of the first review, without
 knowledge by the second reviewer of the identity of the first
 reviewer, and without any communication between the two reviewers.
 If the second expert physician reviewer agrees with the first
 expert physician reviewer, the first reviewer [physician] shall
 issue a final written report on the matter.
 (c) If the second expert physician reviewer does not agree
 with the conclusions of the first expert physician reviewer, then
 the physician who is the subject of the complaint shall be notified
 of the conflict and provided with copies of the conflicting
 reports. A [a] third expert physician reviewer shall review the
 reports of both expert witnesses and all information related to the
 complaint [preliminary report and information] and decide between
 the conclusions reached by the first two expert physician reviewers
 [physicians]. The final written report shall be issued by the third
 physician reviewer or the reviewer [physician] with whom the third
 physician reviewer concurs and must include a copy of the
 dissenting report.
 (e)  Before using a report under this section, the board
 shall provide to the physician who is the subject of the complaint
 the identity and qualifications of each expert physician reviewer
 who reviewed the complaint.
 SECTION 10. Section 154.058, Occupations Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 154.058. DETERMINATION OF MEDICAL COMPETENCY.
 (a) Each complaint against a physician that requires a
 determination of medical competency shall be reviewed initially by
 a board member, consultant, or employee with a medical background
 who is engaged in an active medical practice in the same or similar
 specialty as the physician in the year preceding the review
 [considered sufficient by the board].
 (b) If the initial review under Subsection (a) indicates
 that an act by a physician falls below an acceptable standard of
 care, the complaint shall be reviewed by an expert physician panel
 authorized under Section 154.056(e) consisting of physicians who
 have an active practice in the same specialty as the physician who
 is the subject of the complaint. The identity of the members of the
 expert panel shall be promptly disclosed to the physician who is the
 subject of the complaint [or in another specialty that is similar to
 the physician's specialty].
 (c) The expert physician panel shall report in writing the
 panel's determinations based on the review of the complaint under
 Subsection (b). The report must specify the standard of care that
 applies to the facts that are the basis of the complaint and the
 clinical basis for the panel's determinations, including any
 reliance on peer-reviewed journals, studies, or reports.
 SECTION 11. Subsection (c), Section 164.003, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (c) An affected physician is entitled to:
 (1) reply to the staff's presentation; [and]
 (2) present the facts the physician reasonably
 believes the physician could prove by competent evidence or
 qualified witnesses at a hearing;
 (3)  receive notice at least 48 hours prior to a
 proceeding of the identity of the panel members presiding over the
 informal settlement conference proceedings; and
 (4)  audio or video record or arrange for transcription
 of the informal settlement conference proceedings.
 SECTION 12. Subsection (a), Section 164.0031, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a) In an informal meeting under Section 164.003 or an
 informal hearing under Section 164.103, at least two panelists
 shall be randomly appointed to determine whether an informal
 disposition is appropriate. At least one of the panelists must be a
 physician.
 SECTION 13. Subsection (a-1), Section 164.007, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a-1) The decision of the State Office of Administrative
 Hearings judge shall be binding on the board [The board may change a
 finding of fact or conclusion of law or vacate or modify an order of
 the administrative law judge only if the board makes a
 determination required by Section 2001.058(e), Government Code].
 SECTION 14. Section 164.009, Occupations Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 Sec. 164.009. JUDICIAL REVIEW. (a) A person whose license
 to practice medicine has been revoked or who is subject to other
 disciplinary action by the board may appeal to a Travis County
 district court not later than the 30th day after the date the board
 decision is final.
 (b)  A person whose license to practice medicine has been
 revoked is entitled to a jury trial.
 SECTION 15. Subsection (a), Section 164.053, Occupations
 Code, is amended to read as follows:
 (a) For purposes of Section 164.052(a)(5), unprofessional
 or dishonorable conduct likely to deceive or defraud the public
 includes conduct in which a physician:
 (1) commits an act that violates any state or federal
 law if the act is connected with the physician's practice of
 medicine;
 (2) fails to keep complete and accurate records of
 purchases and disposals of:
 (A) drugs listed in Chapter 481, Health and
 Safety Code; or
 (B) controlled substances scheduled in the
 Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 (21
 U.S.C. Section 801 et seq.);
 (3) writes prescriptions for or dispenses to a person
 who:
 (A) is known to be an abuser of narcotic drugs,
 controlled substances, or dangerous drugs; or
 (B) the physician should have known was an abuser
 of narcotic drugs, controlled substances, or dangerous drugs;
 (4) writes false or fictitious prescriptions for:
 (A) dangerous drugs as defined by Chapter 483,
 Health and Safety Code; or
 (B) controlled substances scheduled in Chapter
 481, Health and Safety Code, or the Comprehensive Drug Abuse
 Prevention and Control Act of 1970 (21 U.S.C. Section 801 et seq.);
 (5) prescribes or administers a drug or treatment that
 is nontherapeutic in nature or nontherapeutic in the manner the
 drug or treatment is administered or prescribed and has a
 likelihood of harm to a patient;
 (6) prescribes, administers, or dispenses in a manner
 inconsistent with public health and welfare:
 (A) dangerous drugs as defined by Chapter 483,
 Health and Safety Code; or
 (B) controlled substances scheduled in Chapter
 481, Health and Safety Code, or the Comprehensive Drug Abuse
 Prevention and Control Act of 1970 (21 U.S.C. Section 801 et seq.);
 (7) violates Section 311.0025, Health and Safety Code;
 (8) fails to supervise adequately the activities of
 those acting under the supervision of the physician; or
 (9) delegates professional medical responsibility or
 acts to a person if the delegating physician knows or has reason to
 know that the person is not qualified by training, experience, or
 licensure to perform the responsibility or acts.
 SECTION 16. The changes in law made by this Act to
 Subsection (a), Section 152.002, and Section 152.003, Occupations
 Code, apply only to a person appointed to the Texas Medical Board on
 or after the effective date of this Act. A person appointed before
 the effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect on
 the date the appointment was made, and the former law is continued
 in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 17. The changes in law made by this Act relating to
 the Texas Medical Board's complaint procedures apply only to a
 complaint filed on or after the effective date of this Act. A
 complaint filed before the effective date of this Act is governed by
 the law in effect on the date the complaint was filed, and the
 former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 18. The changes in law made by this Act relating to
 the Texas Medical Board's disciplinary authority apply only to
 conduct that occurs on or after the effective date of this Act.
 Conduct that occurs before the effective date of this Act is
 governed by the law in effect on the date the conduct occurred, and
 the former law is continued in effect for that purpose.
 SECTION 19. The change in law made by this Act to Subsection
 (a), Section 152.051, Occupations Code, applies only to a person
 appointed as executive director of the Texas Medical Board on or
 after the effective date of this Act. A person appointed before the
 effective date of this Act is governed by the law in effect when the
 person was appointed, and the former law is continued in effect for
 that purpose.
 SECTION 20. This Act takes effect September 1, 2009.