1st Committee Engrossment - 85th Legislature (2007 - 2008) Posted on 12/22/2009 12:38pm
A bill for an act
relating to occupations and professions; providing for registration of naturopathic
doctors; amending Minnesota Statutes 2006, sections 116J.70, subdivision 2a;
145.61, subdivision 2; 146.23, subdivision 7; 148B.60, subdivision 3; 214.23,
subdivision 1; 604A.01, subdivision 2; 604A.015; proposing coding for new law
as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 147E.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
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The definitions in this section apply to this chapter.
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"Advisory council" means the Registered Naturopathic
Doctor Advisory Council established under section 147E.35.
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"Approved naturopathic
medical program" means a naturopathic medical education program in the United States
or Canada and meets the requirements for accreditation by the Council on Naturopathic
Medical Education (CNME) or an equivalent federally recognized accrediting body for
the naturopathic medical profession recognized by the board. This program must offer
graduate-level full-time didactic and supervised clinical training leading to the degree
of Doctor of Naturopathy or Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine. The program must be
an institution, or part of an institution, of higher education that at the time the student
completes the program is:
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(1) either accredited or is a candidate for accreditation by a regional institution
accrediting agency recognized by the United States Secretary of Education; or
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(2) a degree granting college or university that prior to the existence of CNME
offered a full-time structured curriculum in basic sciences and supervised patient care
comprising a doctoral naturopathic medical education that is at least 132 weeks in
duration, must be completed in at least 35 months, and is reputable and in good standing
in the judgment of the board.
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"Board" means the Board of Medical Practice or its designee.
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"Contact hour" means an instructional session of 50
consecutive minutes, excluding coffee breaks, registration, meals without a speaker, and
social activities.
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"Homeopathic preparations" means
medicines prepared according to the Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States.
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"Registered naturopathic doctor" means
a person authorized and registered to practice naturopathic medicine under this chapter.
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"Minor office procedures" means the use of
operative, electrical, or other methods for the repair and care incidental to superficial
lacerations and abrasions, superficial lesions, and the removal of foreign bodies located in
the superficial tissues and the use of antiseptics and local topical anesthetics in connection
with such methods, except that it shall not include general or spinal anesthetics, major
surgery, surgery of the body cavities, or specialized surgeries such as plastic surgery,
surgery involving the eye, or surgery when tendons are involved.
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"Naturopathic licensing
examination" means the Naturopathic Physicians Licensing Examination or its successor
administered by the North American Board of Naturopathic Examiners or its successor as
recognized by the board.
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"Naturopathic medicine" means a system of
primary health care practiced by registered naturopathic doctors for the prevention,
assessment, and treatment of human health conditions, injuries, and diseases that uses:
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(1) services and treatments as described in section 147E.05; and
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(2) natural health procedures and treatments that do not require licensure as defined
in chapter 146A.
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"Naturopathic physical medicine"
includes, but is not limited to, the therapeutic use of the physical agents of air, water, heat,
cold, sound, light, and electromagnetic nonionizing radiation and the physical modalities
of electrotherapy, diathermy, ultraviolet light, hydrotherapy, massage, stretching,
colon hydrotherapy, frequency specific microcurrent, electrical muscle stimulation,
transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, and therapeutic exercise.
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(a) The practice of naturopathic medicine by a
registered naturopathic doctor includes, but is not limited to, the following services:
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(1) ordering, administering, prescribing, or dispensing for preventive and therapeutic
purposes: food, extracts of food, nutraceuticals, vitamins, minerals, amino acids,
enzymes, botanicals and their extracts, botanical medicines, herbal remedies, homeopathic
medicines, all dietary supplements and nonprescription drugs as defined by the federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, glandulars, protomorphogens, lifestyle counseling,
hypnotherapy, biofeedback, dietary therapy, electrotherapy, galvanic therapy, naturopathic
physical medicine, oxygen, therapeutic devices, barrier devices for contraception, and
minor office procedures, including obtaining specimens to assess and treat disease;
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(2) performing or ordering physical and orificial examinations, clinical laboratory
tests and examinations, and physiological function tests;
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(3) referring a patient for diagnostic imaging studies including x-ray, CT scan, MRI,
ultrasound, mammogram, bone densitometry, and referring the studies to an appropriately
licensed health care professional to conduct the study and interpret the results;
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(4) prescribing nonprescription medications and therapeutic devices or ordering
noninvasive diagnostic procedures commonly used by physicians in general practice;
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(5) utilizing routes of administration that include oral, nasal, auricular, ocular,
rectal, and vaginal; and
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(6) prescribing or performing naturopathic physical medicine.
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(b) A registered naturopathic doctor may admit patients to a hospital if the
naturopathic doctor meets the hospital's governing body requirements regarding
credentialing and privileging process.
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(a) The practice of naturopathic medicine
does not include:
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(1) administering therapeutic ionizing radiation or radioactive substances;
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(2) administering general or spinal anesthesia;
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(3) prescribing, dispensing, or administering all legend drugs including
chemotherapeutic substances;
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(4) performing major surgery, plastic surgery, or specialized surgeries; or
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(5) performing or inducing abortions.
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(b) A naturopathic doctor registered under this chapter shall not perform surgical
procedures using a laser device or perform surgical procedures involving the eye, ear,
tendons, nerves, veins, or arteries extending beyond superficial tissue. A naturopathic
doctor shall not practice or claim to practice as a medical doctor, osteopath, dentist,
podiatrist, optometrist, psychologist, advanced practice professional nurse, physician
assistant, chiropractor, physical therapist, acupuncturist, or any other health care
professional, unless the naturopathic physician also holds a license or registration for
another health care practice profession.
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The registered naturopathic doctor shall obtain
informed consent from the patient prior to initiating treatment and after advising the
patient of the naturopathic doctor's qualifications including education, registration
information, and outline of the scope of practice of registered naturopathic doctors in
Minnesota. This information must be supplied to the patient in writing before or at the
time of the initial visit. The registrant shall present treatment facts and options accurately
to the patient or to the individual responsible for the patient's care and make treatment
recommendations according to standards of good naturopathic medical practice.
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(a) A registered naturopathic doctor shall maintain a
record for seven years for each patient treated, including:
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(1) a copy of the informed consent;
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(2) evidence of a patient interview concerning the patient's medical history and
current physical condition;
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(3) evidence of an examination and assessment;
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(4) record of the treatment; and
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(5) evidence of evaluation and instructions given to the patient, including
acknowledgment by the patient in writing that, if deemed necessary by the registered
naturopathic doctor, the patient has been advised to consult with another health care
provider.
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(b) A registered naturopathic doctor shall maintain the records of minor patients for
seven years or until the minor's 19th birthday, whichever is longer.
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Data maintained on a naturopathic patient by a registered
naturopathic doctor is subject to section 144.335.
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new text begin Subd. 4.new text end new text begin State and municipal public health regulations.new text end new text begin A registered naturopathic
doctor shall comply with all applicable state and municipal requirements regarding
public health.
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After July 1, 2008, persons who practice
naturopathic medicine, or represent themselves as practicing naturopathic medicine by
use of a term in subdivision 2, shall conspicuously display the registration in the place of
practice.
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No individual may use the title "registered naturopathic
doctor," "naturopathic doctor," "doctor of naturopathic medicine," or use, in connection
with the individual's name, the letters "N.D.," "R.N.D.," or "N.M.D.," or any other titles,
words, letters, abbreviations, or insignia indicating or implying that the individual is
eligible for registration by the state as a registered naturopath or a registered naturopathic
doctor unless the individual has been registered as a registered naturopathic doctor
according to this chapter.
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Nothing in this chapter may be construed
to prohibit or to restrict:
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(1) the practice of a profession by individuals who are licensed, certified, or
registered under other laws of this state and are performing services within their authorized
scope of practice or unlicensed complementary and alternative health care under chapter
146A;
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(2) the practice of naturopathic medicine by an individual licensed, registered, or
certified in another state and employed by the government of the United States while the
individual is engaged in the performance of duties prescribed by the laws and regulations
of the United States;
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(3) the practice by a naturopathic doctor duly licensed, registered, or certified in
another state, territory, or the District of Columbia when incidentally called into this state
for consultation with a Minnesota licensed physician or Minnesota registered naturopathic
doctor;
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(4) the practice of naturopathic medicine by students enrolled in an approved
naturopathic medical college if the performance of services is according to a course of
instruction or assignments from, and under the supervision of an instructor who is a
licensed physician, osteopath, chiropractor, or registered naturopathic doctor;
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(5) an individual rendering aid in an emergency, when no fee or other consideration
for the service is charged, received, expected, or contemplated;
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(6) an individual administering a remedy to a family member;
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(7) a person engaged in the sale of vitamins, health foods, dietary supplements, and
other products of nature, the sale of which is not otherwise prohibited under state or
federal law except that this clause does not:
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(i) allow that person to diagnose any human disease, ailment, injury, infirmity,
deformity, or other condition; or
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(ii) prohibit providing truthful and nonmisleading information regarding anything
in this chapter;
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(8) a person engaged in good faith in the practice of religious tenets of any religious
belief, without the use of prescription drugs;
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(9) a person acting in good faith for religious reasons as a matter of conscience or as
a personal belief when obtaining or providing information regarding health care and the
use of any product under clause (7); and
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(10) persons not registered by this chapter from the use of individual modalities
which comprise the practice of naturopathic medicine, such as the use of nutritional
supplements, herbs, foods, homeopathic preparations, and physical forces such as heat,
cold, water, touch, and light.
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A person violating subdivision 2 is guilty of a gross misdemeanor.
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To be eligible for
registration, an applicant must:
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(1) submit a completed application on forms provided by the board along with all
fees required under section 147E.40 that includes:
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(i) the applicant's name, Social Security number, home address and telephone
number, and business address and telephone number;
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(ii) the name and location of the naturopathic medical program the applicant
completed;
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(iii) a list of degrees received from other educational institutions;
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(iv) a description of the applicant's professional training beyond the first degree
received;
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(v) a list of registrations, certifications, and licenses held in other jurisdictions;
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(vi) a description of any other jurisdiction's refusal to credential the applicant;
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(vii) a description of all professional disciplinary actions initiated against the
applicant in any jurisdiction; and
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(viii) any history of drug or alcohol abuse, and any misdemeanor or felony
conviction;
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(2) submit a copy of a diploma from an approved naturopathic medical education
program;
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(3) have successfully passed the Naturopathic Physicians Licensing Examination,
a competency-based national naturopathic licensing examination administered by the
North American Board of Naturopathic Examiners or successor agency as recognized
by the board; passing scores are determined by the Naturopathic Physicians Licensing
Examination;
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(4) submit additional information as requested by the board, including providing
any additional information necessary to ensure that the applicant is able to practice with
reasonable skill and safety to the public;
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(5) sign a statement that the information in the application is true and correct to the
best of the applicant's knowledge and belief; and
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(6) sign a waiver authorizing the board to obtain access to the applicant's records
in this or any other state in which the applicant has completed an approved naturopathic
medical program or engaged in the practice of naturopathic medicine.
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(a) To be eligible for
registration by endorsement or reciprocity, the applicant must hold a current naturopathic
license, registration, or certification in another state, Canadian province, the District of
Columbia, or territory of the United States, whose standards for licensure, registration, or
certification are at least equivalent to those of Minnesota, and must:
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(1) submit the application materials and fees as required by subdivision 1, clauses
(1), (2), and (4) to (6);
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(2) have successfully passed either:
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(i) the Naturopathic Physicians Licensing Examination; or
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(ii) if prior to 1986, the state or provincial naturopathic board licensing examination
required by that regulating state or province;
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(3) provide a verified copy from the appropriate government body of a current
license, registration, or certification for the practice of naturopathic medicine in another
jurisdiction that has initial licensing, registration, or certification requirements equivalent
to or higher than the requirements in subdivision 1; and
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(4) provide letters of verification from the appropriate government body in each
jurisdiction in which the applicant holds a license, registration, or certification. Each letter
must state the applicant's name, date of birth, license, registration, or certification number,
date of issuance, a statement regarding disciplinary actions, if any, taken against the
applicant, and the terms under which the license, registration, or certification was issued.
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(b) An applicant applying for license, registration, or certification by endorsement
must be licensed, registered, or certified in another state or Canadian province
prior to January 1, 2005, and have completed a 60-hour course and examination in
pharmacotherapeutics.
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The board may issue a temporary registration to
practice as a registered naturopathic doctor to an applicant who is licensed, registered, or
certified in another state or Canadian province and is eligible for registration under this
section, if the application for registration is complete, all applicable requirements in this
section have been met, and a nonrefundable fee has been paid. The temporary registration
remains valid only until the meeting of the board at which time a decision is made on the
registered naturopathic doctor's application for registration.
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Registrations issued under this chapter expire
annually.
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(a) To be eligible for registration renewal a registrant must:
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(1) annually, or as determined by the board, complete a renewal application on a
form provided by the board;
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(2) submit the renewal fee;
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(3) provide evidence of a total of 25 hours of continuing education approved by the
board as described in section 147E.25; and
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(4) submit any additional information requested by the board to clarify information
presented in the renewal application. The information must be submitted within 30 days
after the board's request, or the renewal request is nullified.
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A registrant who changes addresses must inform
the board within 30 days, in writing, of the change of address. All notices or other
correspondence mailed to or served on a registrant by the board are considered as having
been received by the registrant.
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At least 45 days before the registration
renewal date, the board shall send out a renewal notice to the last known address of the
registrant on file. The notice must include a renewal application and a notice of fees
required for renewal or instructions for online renewal. It must also inform the registrant
that registration will expire without further action by the board if an application for
registration renewal is not received before the deadline for renewal. The registrant's
failure to receive this notice does not relieve the registrant of the obligation to meet the
deadline and other requirements for registration renewal. Failure to receive this notice is
not grounds for challenging expiration of registration status.
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The renewal application and fee must be postmarked
on or before December 31 of the year of renewal. If the postmark is illegible, the
application is considered timely if received by the third working day after the deadline.
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(a) A registrant may be
placed in inactive status upon application to the board by the registrant and upon payment
of an inactive status fee.
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(b) Registrants seeking restoration to active from inactive status must pay the current
renewal fees and all unpaid back inactive fees. They must meet the criteria for renewal
specified in subdivision 5, including continuing education hours.
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(c) Registrants whose inactive status period has been five years or longer must
additionally have a period of no less than eight weeks of advisory council-approved
supervision by another registered naturopathic doctor.
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For any individual whose registration status has lapsed for two years or less, to
regain registration status, the individual must:
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(1) apply for registration renewal according to subdivision 5;
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(2) document compliance with the continuing education requirements of section
147E.25 since the registrant's initial registration or last renewal; and
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(3) submit the fees required under section 147E.40 for the period not registered,
including the fee for late renewal.
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The board shall not renew, reissue,
reinstate, or restore a registration that has lapsed and has not been renewed within two
annual registration renewal cycles starting January 2007. A registrant whose registration
is canceled for nonrenewal must obtain a new registration by applying for registration
and fulfilling all requirements then in existence for initial registration as a registered
naturopathic doctor.
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(a) A registrant holding
an active registration as a registered naturopathic doctor in the state may, upon approval
of the board, be granted registration cancellation if the board is not investigating the
person as a result of a complaint or information received or if the board has not begun
disciplinary proceedings against the registrant. Such action by the board must be reported
as a cancellation of registration in good standing.
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(b) A registrant who receives board approval for registration cancellation is not
entitled to a refund of any registration fees paid for the registration year in which
cancellation of the registration occurred.
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(c) To obtain registration after cancellation, a registrant must obtain a new
registration by applying for registration and fulfilling the requirements then in existence
for obtaining initial registration as a registered naturopathic doctor.
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A registrant may change the status of
the registration to "emeritus" by filing the appropriate forms and paying the onetime
fee of $50 to the board. This status allows the registrant to retain the title of registered
naturopathic doctor but restricts the registrant from actively seeing patients.
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(a) The board shall act on each application for registration according to paragraphs
(b) to (d).
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(b) The board shall determine if the applicant meets the requirements for registration
under section 147E.15. The board or advisory council may investigate information
provided by an applicant to determine whether the information is accurate and complete.
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(c) The board shall notify each applicant in writing of action taken on the application,
the grounds for denying registration if registration is denied, and the applicant's right
to review under paragraph (d).
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(d) Applicants denied registration may make a written request to the board, within
30 days of the board's notice, to appear before the advisory council or the board and for
the advisory council to review the board's decision to deny the applicant's registration.
After reviewing the denial, the advisory council shall make a recommendation to the board
as to whether the denial shall be affirmed. Each applicant is allowed only one request
for review each yearly registration period.
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(a) A registrant applying for
registration renewal must complete a minimum of 25 contact hours of board-approved
continuing education in the year preceding registration renewal, with the exception of
the registrant's first incomplete year, and attest to completion of continuing education
requirements by reporting to the board.
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(b) Of the 25 contact hours of continuing education requirement in paragraph (a), at
least five hours of continuing education must be in pharmacotherapeutics.
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The board shall approve continuing education
programs that have been approved for continuing education credit by the American
Association of Naturopathic Physicians or any of its constituent state associations, the
American Chiropractic Association or any of its constituent state associations, the
American Osteopathic Association Bureau of Professional Education, the American
Pharmacists Association or any of its constituent state associations, or an organization
approved by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education.
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The board shall also
approve continuing education programs that do not meet the requirements of subdivision 2
but meet the following criteria:
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(1) the program content directly relates to the practice of naturopathic medicine;
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(2) each member of the program faculty is knowledgeable in the subject matter as
demonstrated by a degree from an accredited education program, verifiable experience in
the field of naturopathic medicine, special training in the subject matter, or experience
teaching in the subject area;
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(3) the program lasts at least 50 minutes per contact hour;
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(4) there are specific, measurable, written objectives, consistent with the program,
describing the expected outcomes for the participants; and
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(5) the program sponsor has a mechanism to verify participation and maintains
attendance records for three years.
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A registrant may not apply contact hours
acquired in one one-year reporting period to a future continuing education reporting period.
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The board shall periodically
select a random sample of registrants and require those registrants to supply the board
with evidence of having completed the continuing education to which they attested.
Documentation may come directly from the registrants from state or national organizations
that maintain continuing education records.
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Continuing education program topics
may include, but are not limited to, naturopathic medical theory and techniques
including diagnostic techniques, nutrition, botanical medicine, homeopathic medicine,
physical medicine, lifestyle modification counseling, anatomy, physiology, biochemistry,
pharmacology, pharmacognosy, microbiology, medical ethics, psychology, history of
medicine, and medical terminology or coding.
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(a) A registrant may apply
no more than five hours of practice management to a one-year reporting period.
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(b) A registrant may apply no more than 15 hours to any single subject area.
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The board may exempt any person
holding a registration under this chapter from the requirements of subdivision 1 upon
application showing evidence satisfactory to the board of inability to comply with the
requirements because of physical or mental condition or because of other unusual or
extenuating circumstances. However, no person may be exempted from the requirements
of subdivision 1 more than once in any five-year period.
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For purposes of this chapter, registered naturopathic doctors and applicants are
subject to sections 147.091 to 147.162.
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The board shall appoint a seven-member Registered
Naturopathic Doctor Advisory Council appointed by the governor consisting of one public
member as defined in section 214.02, five registered naturopathic doctors who are residents
of the state, and one licensed physician or osteopath with expertise in natural medicine.
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The advisory council shall be organized and administered
under section 15.059. The council shall not expire.
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The advisory council shall:
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(1) advise the board regarding standards for registered naturopathic doctors;
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(2) provide for distribution of information regarding registered naturopathic doctors
standards;
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(3) advise the board on enforcement of sections 147.091 to 147.162;
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(4) review applications and recommend granting or denying registration or
registration renewal;
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(5) advise the board on issues related to receiving and investigating complaints,
conducting hearings, and imposing disciplinary action in relation to complaints against
registered naturopathic doctors;
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(6) advise the board regarding approval of continuing education programs using the
criteria in section 147E.25, subdivision 3; and
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(7) perform other duties authorized for advisory councils by chapter 214, as directed
by the board.
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Fees are as follows:
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(1) registration application fee, $200;
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(2) renewal fee, $150;
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(3) late fee, $75;
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(4) inactive status fee, $50; and
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(5) temporary permit fee, $25.
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The board may prorate the initial annual registration
fee. All registrants are required to pay the full fee upon registration renewal.
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An application for registration renewal
submitted after the deadline must be accompanied by a late fee in addition to the required
fees.
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All of the fees in subdivision 1 are nonrefundable.
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This article is effective July 1, 2008.
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Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 116J.70, subdivision 2a, is amended to
read:
"Business license" or "license" does not include
the following:
(1) any occupational license or registration issued by a licensing board listed in
section 214.01 or any occupational registration issued by the commissioner of health
pursuant to section 214.13;
(2) any license issued by a county, home rule charter city, statutory city, township, or
other political subdivision;
(3) any license required to practice the following occupation regulated by the
following sections:
(i) abstracters regulated pursuant to chapter 386;
(ii) accountants regulated pursuant to chapter 326A;
(iii) adjusters regulated pursuant to chapter 72B;
(iv) architects regulated pursuant to chapter 326;
(v) assessors regulated pursuant to chapter 270;
(vi) athletic trainers regulated pursuant to chapter 148;
(vii) attorneys regulated pursuant to chapter 481;
(viii) auctioneers regulated pursuant to chapter 330;
(ix) barbers and cosmetologists regulated pursuant to chapter 154;
(x) boiler operators regulated pursuant to chapter 183;
(xi) chiropractors regulated pursuant to chapter 148;
(xii) collection agencies regulated pursuant to chapter 332;
(xiii) dentists, registered dental assistants, and dental hygienists regulated pursuant
to chapter 150A;
(xiv) detectives regulated pursuant to chapter 326;
(xv) electricians regulated pursuant to chapter 326;
(xvi) mortuary science practitioners regulated pursuant to chapter 149A;
(xvii) engineers regulated pursuant to chapter 326;
(xviii) insurance brokers and salespersons regulated pursuant to chapter 60A;
(xix) certified interior designers regulated pursuant to chapter 326;
(xx) midwives regulated pursuant to chapter 147D;
(xxi) new text begin naturopathic doctors registered pursuant to chapter 147E;
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new text begin (xxii) new text end nursing home administrators regulated pursuant to chapter 144A;
deleted text begin (xxii)deleted text end new text begin (xxiii)new text end optometrists regulated pursuant to chapter 148;
deleted text begin (xxiii)deleted text end new text begin (xxiv)new text end osteopathic physicians regulated pursuant to chapter 147;
deleted text begin (xxiv)deleted text end new text begin (xxv)new text end pharmacists regulated pursuant to chapter 151;
deleted text begin (xxv)deleted text end new text begin (xxvi)new text end physical therapists regulated pursuant to chapter 148;
deleted text begin (xxvi)deleted text end new text begin (xxvii)new text end physician assistants regulated pursuant to chapter 147A;
deleted text begin (xxvii)deleted text end new text begin (xxviii)new text end physicians and surgeons regulated pursuant to chapter 147;
deleted text begin (xxviii)deleted text end new text begin (xxix)new text end plumbers regulated pursuant to chapter 326;
deleted text begin (xxix)deleted text end new text begin (xxx)new text end podiatrists regulated pursuant to chapter 153;
deleted text begin (xxx)deleted text end new text begin (xxxi)new text end practical nurses regulated pursuant to chapter 148;
deleted text begin (xxxi)deleted text end new text begin (xxxii)new text end professional fund-raisers regulated pursuant to chapter 309;
deleted text begin (xxxii)deleted text end new text begin (xxxiii)new text end psychologists regulated pursuant to chapter 148;
deleted text begin (xxxiii)deleted text end new text begin (xxxiv)new text end real estate brokers, salespersons, and others regulated pursuant to
chapters 82 and 83;
deleted text begin (xxxiv)deleted text end new text begin (xxxv)new text end registered nurses regulated pursuant to chapter 148;
deleted text begin (xxxv)deleted text end new text begin (xxxvi)new text end securities brokers, dealers, agents, and investment advisers regulated
pursuant to chapter 80A;
deleted text begin (xxxvi)deleted text end new text begin (xxxvii)new text end steamfitters regulated pursuant to chapter 326;
deleted text begin (xxxvii)deleted text end new text begin (xxxviii)new text end teachers and supervisory and support personnel regulated pursuant
to chapter 125;
deleted text begin (xxxviii)deleted text end new text begin (xxxix)new text end veterinarians regulated pursuant to chapter 156;
deleted text begin (xxxix)deleted text end new text begin (xl)new text end water conditioning contractors and installers regulated pursuant to
chapter 326;
deleted text begin (xl)deleted text end new text begin (xli)new text end water well contractors regulated pursuant to chapter 103I;
deleted text begin (xli)deleted text end new text begin (xlii)new text end water and waste treatment operators regulated pursuant to chapter 115;
deleted text begin (xlii)deleted text end new text begin (xliii)new text end motor carriers regulated pursuant to chapter 221;
deleted text begin (xliii)deleted text end new text begin (xliv)new text end professional firms regulated under chapter 319B;
deleted text begin (xliv)deleted text end new text begin (xlv)new text end real estate appraisers regulated pursuant to chapter 82B;
deleted text begin (xlv)deleted text end new text begin (xlvi)new text end residential building contractors, residential remodelers, residential
roofers, manufactured home installers, and specialty contractors regulated pursuant
to chapter 326;new text begin or
new text end
deleted text begin (xlvi)deleted text end new text begin (xlvii)new text end licensed professional counselors regulated pursuant to chapter 148B;
(4) any driver's license required pursuant to chapter 171;
(5) any aircraft license required pursuant to chapter 360;
(6) any watercraft license required pursuant to chapter 86B;
(7) any license, permit, registration, certification, or other approval pertaining to a
regulatory or management program related to the protection, conservation, or use of or
interference with the resources of land, air, or water, which is required to be obtained
from a state agency or instrumentality; and
(8) any pollution control rule or standard established by the Pollution Control
Agency or any health rule or standard established by the commissioner of health or any
licensing rule or standard established by the commissioner of human services.
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 145.61, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
"Professional" means a person licensed or registered to
practice a healing art under chapter 147new text begin , 147E,new text end or 148, to practice dentistry under chapter
150A, to practice as a pharmacist under chapter 151, or to practice podiatry under chapter
153.
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 146.23, subdivision 7, is amended to read:
The provisions of subdivision 2 do not apply to physicians
and doctors of osteopathy licensed under chapter 147new text begin or naturopathic doctors registered
under chapter 147Enew text end .
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 148B.60, subdivision 3, is amended to read:
"Unlicensed
mental health practitioner" or "practitioner" means a person who provides or purports to
provide, for remuneration, mental health services as defined in subdivision 4. It does not
include persons licensed by the Board of Medical Practice under chapter 147 new text begin or 147E new text end or
registered by the Board of Medical Practice under chapter 147A; the Board of Nursing
under sections 148.171 to 148.285; the Board of Psychology under sections 148.88
to 148.98; the Board of Social Work under chapter 148D; the Board of Marriage and
Family Therapy under sections 148B.29 to 148B.39; the Board of Behavioral Health and
Therapy under sections 148B.50 to 148B.593 and chapter 148C; or another licensing
board if the person is practicing within the scope of the license; members of the clergy
who are providing pastoral services in the context of performing and fulfilling the salaried
duties and obligations required of a member of the clergy by a religious congregation;
American Indian medicine men and women; licensed attorneys; probation officers; school
counselors employed by a school district while acting within the scope of employment
as school counselors; licensed occupational therapists; or licensed occupational therapy
assistants. For the purposes of complaint investigation or disciplinary action relating to an
individual practitioner, the term includes:
(1) persons employed by a program licensed by the commissioner of human services
who are acting as mental health practitioners within the scope of their employment;
(2) persons employed by a program licensed by the commissioner of human services
who are providing chemical dependency counseling services; persons who are providing
chemical dependency counseling services in private practice; and
(3) clergy who are providing mental health services that are equivalent to those
defined in subdivision 4.
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 214.23, subdivision 1, is amended to read:
The board shall enter into a contract
with the commissioner to perform the functions in subdivisions 2 and 3. The contract
shall provide that:
(1) unless requested to do otherwise by a regulated person, a board shall refer all
regulated persons infected with HIV, HBV, or HCV to the commissioner;
(2) the commissioner may choose to refer any regulated person who is infected
with HIV, HBV, or HCV as well as all information related thereto to the person's board
at any time for any reason, including but not limited to: the degree of cooperation and
compliance by the regulated person; the inability to secure information or the medical
records of the regulated person; or when the facts may present other possible violations
of the regulated persons practices act. Upon request of the regulated person who is
infected with HIV, HBV, or HCV the commissioner shall refer the regulated person and all
information related thereto to the person's board. Once the commissioner has referred a
regulated person to a board, the board may not thereafter submit it to the commissioner to
establish a monitoring plan unless the commissioner of health consents in writing;
(3) a board shall not take action on grounds relating solely to the HIV, HBV, or HCV
status of a regulated person until after referral by the commissioner; and
(4) notwithstanding sections 13.39 and 13.41 and chapters 147, 147A, new text begin 147E, new text end 148,
150A, 153, and 214, a board shall forward to the commissioner any information on a
regulated person who is infected with HIV, HBV, or HCV that the Department of Health
requests.
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 604A.01, subdivision 2, is amended to read:
(a) A person who, without
compensation or the expectation of compensation, renders emergency care, advice, or
assistance at the scene of an emergency or during transit to a location where professional
medical care can be rendered, is not liable for any civil damages as a result of acts or
omissions by that person in rendering the emergency care, advice, or assistance, unless the
person acts in a willful and wanton or reckless manner in providing the care, advice, or
assistance. This subdivision does not apply to a person rendering emergency care, advice,
or assistance during the course of regular employment, and receiving compensation or
expecting to receive compensation for rendering the care, advice, or assistance.
(b) For the purposes of this section, the scene of an emergency is an area outside
the confines of a hospital or other institution that has hospital facilities, or an office of
a person licensed to practice one or more of the healing arts under chapter 147, 147A,
new text begin 147E, new text end 148, 150A, or 153. The scene of an emergency includes areas threatened by or
exposed to spillage, seepage, fire, explosion, or other release of hazardous materials,
and includes ski areas and trails.
(c) For the purposes of this section, "person" includes a public or private nonprofit
volunteer firefighter, volunteer police officer, volunteer ambulance attendant, volunteer
first provider of emergency medical services, volunteer ski patroller, and any partnership,
corporation, association, or other entity.
(d) For the purposes of this section, "compensation" does not include payments,
reimbursement for expenses, or pension benefits paid to members of volunteer
organizations.
(e) For purposes of this section, "emergency care" includes providing emergency
medical care by using or providing an automatic external defibrillator, unless the person
on whom the device is to be used objects; or unless the person is rendering this care
during the course of regular employment, the person is receiving or expects to receive
compensation for rendering this care, and the usual and regular duties of the person
include the provision of emergency medical care. "Automatic external defibrillator"
means a medical device heart monitor and defibrillator that:
(1) has received approval of its premarket notification, filed pursuant to United States
Code, title 21, section 360(k), from the United States Food and Drug Administration;
(2) is capable of recognizing the presence or absence of ventricular fibrillation or
rapid ventricular tachycardia, and is capable of determining, without intervention by an
operator, whether defibrillation should be performed; and
(3) upon determining that defibrillation should be performed, automatically charges
and requests delivery of an electrical impulse to an individual's heart.
Minnesota Statutes 2006, section 604A.015, is amended to read:
A school bus driver who, while on duty, provides emergency care, advice, or
assistance at the scene of an emergency or during transit to a location where professional
medical care can be rendered, is not liable in ordinary negligence, for any civil damages as
a result of acts or omissions to the person to whom assistance is rendered by the school
bus driver in rendering the emergency care, advice, or assistance. For the purposes of this
section, the scene of an emergency is an area outside the confines of a hospital or other
institution that has hospital facilities, or an office of a person licensed to practice one or
more of the healing arts under chapter 147, new text begin 147E, new text end 148, 150A, or 153.
new text begin
This article is effective July 1, 2008.
new text end