Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF’ =XAS Auam~. TEXAS 787ll September 9, 1974 The Honorable Margaret L. Rowland, R. N. Opinion No. H- 395 :’ Executive Secretary Board of Nurse Examiners for the State Re: Circumstances under of Texas which person not licensed 55 North Interregional, Suite 101 as nurse may perform Austin, Texas 78702 professional nursing acts. Dear Mrs. Rowland:. You have asked three (3) questions having to do with the performance of nursing acts by persons not licensed under the Texas statutes regulating the practice of professional nursing, Article 4513, V. T. C. S., et o’eq. You first ask: Does the definition of professional nursing in Section 5 of 4518 [V. T. C. S. ]. taken in conjunction with the requirement of registration in Section 4 of 4518 [V. T. C. S. ], permit one employed by a Texas hospital to practic,e professional nursing in Texas hospitals or eLsewhere whether or not they . are Mcensed by the Texas State Board of Nurse Examiners 7 The definition of pr,ofessional nursing to which you refer reads: ‘Professional Nursing’ shall be defined for the purpose.6 of this Act as the performance for compensation of any nursing act (a) in the observation, care and counrel of the’ill, injured or infirm; (b) in the maintenance of health or prevention of illness of others; (c) in the administration of medicationr or treatmenta a# p. 1848 , . The Honorable Margaret L. Rowland page 2 (H-395) prescribed by,a licensed physician or dentist; (d) in the supervision or teaching of nursing, insofar as any of the above acts require substantial dalined judgment and skill and insofar as the proper performance of any of the above acts is based upon knowledge and application of the principles of biological, phvsical and social science as acquired by a-complete course in an approved school of pro- fes.sional nursing. The foregoing shall not be deemed to include acts of medical dia.gnosis or prescription of therapeutic or corrective measures. (Emphasis addrd) Obviously, this definition does not encompass all nursing acts. Some nursing acts do not require the Bame high degree of knowledge and skill and, therefore, are not regulated by the “professional” nursing provisions defined above, The requirement of registration to which you refer was impoaed by Acts 1969, p. 1571, ch. 476, and is codified as Article 4518 5 4, V. T. C. S. It reads: Any person practici.ng or offering to practice Fofessional nurring in this state for compensation, shall hereafter be required to submit evidence to the Board of Nurse Examiners that he or she is qualified to practice and shall be registered as provided by law. (Emphasis added) That same Act of the Legislature amended Article 4528, V. T. C.S., which now reads: This law shall not be construed to appiy to: the gratuitous nursing of the sick by friends; the furnishing of nursing care where treatment is by prayer or spiritual means alone: acts done under the control or supervision or at the instruc- tion of one licensed by the Texas State Board of p. 1849 The Honorable Margaret L. Rowland page 3 (H-395) Medical Examiners: Licensed Vocational Nurses; the practice of registered tuberculosis nurses certified under Article 4528b, Vernon’s Texas Civil Statutes; nor to acts done by persons licensed by any board or agency of the State of Texas if such acts are authorized by such licensing statutes. (Emphasis added) Under the clear language of these statutes, we think the mere fact that one is employed by a Texas hospital is insufficient by itself to exempt anyone from the regulatory requirements applicable to professional nurring, and we answer your firot question in the ne,gative. Your second and third questions ask: (2) With reference to Article 4528 [V. T. C.S.] in a Texas hospital, can one employed by a Texas hospital not licensed to practice professional nursing in Texas do nursing acts ‘under the control or supervisiqn of one licensed to practice medicine in Texas’ if a physician is not actually present and directly controlling or super- vising said unlicensed pe,rson? (3) With reference to Article 4528 [V. T. C. S.], in a Texas hoscitai, can one employed by a ‘Texas hospital not licensed to practice professional nursing in Texas do nursing acts wherein the person licensed to practice medicine in Texas is not present and directly instructing euch unlicensed person? These two questions, in our opinion, are likewise answered by the clear unambiguour language of the statutes, and especially the emphasi&ed words of Article 4528, supra. Whether the acts are performed in a hospital or elsewhere,, or by a hospital employee or someone else, does not appear to be the controlling The Honorable Margaret L. Rowland page 4 (H-395) factor under the language of Article 4528; the controlling factors appear to us to be whether the acts are done under the control or supervision of one licensed by the Board of Medical Examiners or that they be done at the instruction of a licensee. In Attorney General Opinion H-368 we construed a similar statute applicable to the practice of physical therapy and exempting from licensing “employees performing services under the direct supervision of a physLcian in a hospital . . . . ” We said that, in our opinion, the provision did not require the constant physical presence of the physician and that it would be satisfied if “the responsible physician personally trains and inatrukts the hospital employee in the process to be employed and remains reas,onably available to inspect, correct, and direct the work of the employee . . . . ~” So, too, we believe that Article 4528. V. T. C: S., does not require the constant physical presence of a physician to authorize the performance of professional nursing acts by one not otherwise licensed to perform them, so long as the responsible physician personally assumes control and supervision of the employee or instructs him in what is to be done, and remains reasonably available to see that the nursing acts are properly performed. SUMMARY Hospital employment alone does not exempt one from etatutory regulations concerning professional nursing. It a physician ham assumed and exercises control or supervision of an unlicensed person per- forming professional nursing duties or has peraonally instructed that person in the acts to be done, that person is not precluded by the statutes governing professional nursing from performing such pro- fessional nursing acts. p. 1851 The Honorable Margaret L. Rowland page 5 (H-395) ---+-dLw DAVID M. KENDALL. Opinion Committee Chairman lg p. 1852