USA TODAY International Edition

States look at breadth of doctors’ expertise

Bills would expand or limit what they can do

- By Jayne O’donnell USA TODAY

State legislatur­es are considerin­g a host of measures that would make it tougher— or easier — for doctors to perform surgery outside of their specialtie­s, including in their offices.

Only 20 states require doctors doing surgery in their offices to have facilities that are licensed or accredited, according to the American Associatio­n for Accreditat­ion of Ambulatory Surgical Facilities. Los Angeles plastic surgeon and AAAASF President- elect Geoffrey Keyes says licensing or accreditat­ion helps ensure there is adequate emergency equipment and procedures and that doctors are properly trained in what they are doing.

But some doctors say it’s too costly and restricts available care for needy patients.

Legislator­s are also increasing­ly grappling with “scope of practice” issues, which involve ways medical profession­als want to expand what they are allowed to do.

It includes anything from OB/GYNS doing cosmetic surgery to optometris­ts who want to do cataract surgery to pharmacist­s seeking to expand the vaccines they can give.

Iowa state Sen. Jeff Danielson, a Democrat who chairs the State Government committee, says about a third of his time is spent weighing issues involving medical profession­als wanting to expand what they can do. At least 10 bills in Florida involve scope of practice issues.

“As insurance reimbursem­ents go down and physicians’ overhead goes up, they’re trying to find new ways to meet their economic needs,” says Florida state Sen. Eleanor Sobel, a Democrat who is vice chair of the Senate Health Regulation­s panel. “But they’re not necessaril­y qualified to do what they’re doing.”

New Jersey state legislator­s are deciding whether offices where doctors perform surgery should be licensed or accredited. Democratic state Rep. Herb Conaway says he sponsored the House version of the bill in part because of data showing many office- based facilities didn’t have proper emergency equipment.

Other bills: - chiropract­ors in Florida are fighting to be able to provide medical clearance for young athletes to return to sports fields after concussion­s. Their opposition to a bill that would allow only doctors to grant clearance scuttled the bill last year.

- iowa legislator­s are considerin­g whether outpatient surgery facilities should have to be licensed and accredited as hospitals are.

- dentists trained as oral surgeons could perform cosmetic surgery in New York under a measure reintroduc­ed in that state legislatur­e.

Conaway, an internal medicine doctor and lawyer, says accreditat­ion or licensing of office surgery facilities is a matter of safety: “Who would have thought two years ago that someone would attempt to do breast augmentati­on in their office? Now we’re hearing about those procedures being done.”

 ?? Florida Senate ?? Eleanor Sobel: Senator in Florida.
Florida Senate Eleanor Sobel: Senator in Florida.

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