Notice of Request for Information on the Department of Veterans Affairs Creative Arts Therapists (Dance/Movement) Standard of Practice, 48949-48951 [2023-16006]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 144 / Friday, July 28, 2023 / Notices
‘‘Blocking Property and Suspending Entry
into the United States of Certain Persons
Contributing to the Destabilizing Situation in
the Western Balkans’’ (E.O. 14033), 86 FR
31079 (June 10, 2021), 3 CFR 2021 Comp., p.
591, for being responsible for or complicit in,
or to have directly or indirectly engaged in,
corruption related to the Western Balkans,
including corruption by, on behalf of, or
otherwise related to a government in the
Western Balkans, or a current or former
government official at any level of
government in the Western Balkans, such as
the misappropriation of public assets,
expropriation of private assets for personal
gain or political purposes, or bribery.
Dated: July 19, 2023.
Bradley T. Smith,
Deputy Director, Office of Foreign Assets
Control, U.S. Department of the Treasury.
individual. VA encourages individuals
not to submit duplicative comments. We
will post acceptable comments from
multiple unique commenters even if the
content is identical or nearly identical
to other comments. Any public
comment received after the comment
period’s closing date is considered late
and will not be considered in any
potential future rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ethan Kalett, Office of Regulations,
Appeals and Policy (10BRAP), Veterans
Health Administration, Department of
Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20420, 202–461–
0500. This is not a toll-free number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[FR Doc. 2023–15977 Filed 7–27–23; 8:45 am]
Authority
BILLING CODE 4810–AL–P
Chapters 73 and 74 of 38 U.S.C. and
38 U.S.C. 303 authorize the Secretary to
regulate the professional activities of VA
health care professions to make certain
that VA’s health care system provides
safe and effective health care by
qualified health care professionals to
ensure the well-being of those Veterans
who have borne the battle.
On November 12, 2020, VA published
an interim final rule confirming that VA
health care professionals may practice
their health care profession consistent
with the scope and requirements of their
VA employment, notwithstanding any
State license, registration, certification,
or other requirements that unduly
interfere with their practice. 38 CFR
17.419; 85 FR 71838. Specifically, this
rulemaking confirmed VA’s current
practice of allowing VA health care
professionals to deliver health care
services in a State other than the health
care professional’s State of licensure,
registration, certification, or other State
requirement, thereby enhancing
beneficiaries’ access to critical VA
health care services. The rulemaking
also confirmed VA’s authority to
establish national standards of practice
for its health care professionals that
would standardize a health care
professional’s practice in all VA medical
facilities.
The rulemaking explained that a
national standard of practice describes
the tasks and duties that a VA health
care professional practicing in the
health care profession may perform and
may be permitted to undertake. Having
a national standard of practice means
that individuals from the same VA
health care profession may provide the
same type of tasks and duties regardless
of the VA medical facility where they
are located or the State license,
registration, certification, or other State
requirement they hold. We emphasized
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Notice of Request for Information on
the Department of Veterans Affairs
Creative Arts Therapists (Dance/
Movement) Standard of Practice
AGENCY:
Department of Veterans Affairs
(VA).
ACTION:
Request for information.
Dance/Movement Therapists
use psychotherapeutic movement to
promote emotional, social, cognitive,
spiritual and physical integration of the
individual for the purpose of improving
health and well-being. VA is requesting
information to assist in developing a
national standard of practice for VA
Creative Arts Therapists (Dance/
Movement). VA seeks comments on
various topics to help inform VA’s
development of this national standard of
practice.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before September 26, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be
submitted through www.regulations.gov.
Except as provided below, comments
received before the close of the
comment period will be available at
www.regulations.gov for public viewing,
inspection, or copying, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post the comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following
website as soon as possible after they
have been received: https://
www.regulations.gov. VA will not post
on Regulations.gov public comments
that make threats to individuals or
institutions or suggest that the
commenter will take actions to harm the
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SUMMARY:
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48949
in the rulemaking and reiterate here that
VA will determine, on an individual
basis, that a health care professional has
the necessary education, training and
skills to perform the tasks and duties
detailed in the national standard of
practice and will only be able to
perform such tasks and duties after they
have been incorporated into the
individual’s privileges, scope of
practice, or functional statement. The
rulemaking explicitly did not create any
such national standards and directed
that all national standards of practice
would be subsequently created via
policy.
Need for National Standards of Practice
As the Nation’s largest integrated
health care system, it is critical that VA
develops national standards of practice
to ensure beneficiaries receive the same
high-quality care regardless of where
they enter the system and to ensure that
VA health care professionals can
efficiently meet the needs of
beneficiaries when practicing within the
scope of their VA employment. National
standards are designed to increase
beneficiaries’ access to safe and effective
health care, thereby improving health
outcomes. The importance of this
initiative has been underscored by the
Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic.
With an increased need for mobility in
our workforce, including through VA’s
Disaster Emergency Medical Personnel
System, creating a uniform standard of
practice better supports VA health care
professionals who already frequently
practice across State lines. In addition,
the development of national standards
of practice aligns with VA’s long-term
deployment of a new electronic health
record (EHR). National standards of
practice are critical for optimal EHR
implementation to enable the specific
roles for each health care profession in
EHR to be consistent across the Veterans
Health Administration (VHA) and to
support increased interoperability
between VA and the Department of
Defense (DoD). DoD has historically
standardized practice for certain health
care professionals, and VHA closely
partnered with DoD to learn from their
experience.
Process To Develop National Standards
of Practice
Consistent with 38 CFR 17.419, VA is
developing national standards of
practice via policy. There will be one
overarching national standard of
practice directive that will generally
describe VHA’s policy and have each
individual national standard of practice
as an appendix to the directive. The
directive and all appendices will be
E:\FR\FM\28JYN1.SGM
28JYN1
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
48950
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 144 / Friday, July 28, 2023 / Notices
accessible on VHA Publications website
at: https://vaww.va.gov/
vhapublications/ (internal) and https://
www.va.gov/vhapublications/ (external)
once published.
To develop these national standards,
VA is using a robust, interactive process
that is consistent with the guidance
outlined in Executive Order (E.O.)
13132 to preempt State law. The process
includes consultation with internal and
external stakeholders, including State
licensing boards, VA employees,
professional associations, Veterans
Service Organizations, labor partners
and others. For each identified VA
occupation, a workgroup comprised of
health care professionals conducts State
variance research to identify internal
best practices that may not be
authorized under every State license,
certification, or registration, but would
enhance the practice and efficiency of
the profession throughout the agency.
The workgroup is comprised of VA
employees who are health care
professionals in the identified
occupation; they may consult with
internal stakeholders at any point
throughout the process. If a best practice
is identified that is not currently
authorized by every State, the
workgroup determines what education,
training and skills are required to
perform such task or duty. The
workgroup then drafts a proposed VA
national standard of practice using the
data gathered during the State variance
research and incorporates internal
stakeholder feedback to date.
The proposed national standard of
practice is internally reviewed, to
include by an interdisciplinary
workgroup consisting of representatives
from Quality Management; Field Chief
of Staff; Academic Affiliates; Field Chief
Nursing Officer; Ethics; Workforce
Management and Consulting; Surgery;
Credentialing and Privileging; Field
Chief Medical Officer; and EHR
Modernization.
Externally, the proposed national
standard of practice is provided to our
partners in DoD. In addition, VA labor
partners are engaged informally as part
of a pre-decisional collaboration.
Consistent with E.O. 13132, a letter is
sent to each State board and certifying
organization that includes the proposed
national standard and an opportunity to
further discuss the national standard
with VA. After the States and certifying
organization have received notification,
the proposed national standard of
practice is published to the Federal
Register for 60 days to obtain feedback
from the public, including professional
associations and unions. At the same
time, the proposed national standard is
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:16 Jul 27, 2023
Jkt 259001
published on an internal VA site to
obtain feedback from VA employees.
Feedback from State boards,
professional associations, unions, VA
employees and any other person or
organization who informally provides
comments via the Federal Register will
be reviewed. VA will make appropriate
revisions in light of the comments,
including those that present evidencebased practice and alternatives that help
VA meet our mission and goals, and that
are better for Veterans or VA health care
professionals. We will publish a
collective response to all comments at
https://www.va.gov/standards
ofpractice.
After the national standard of practice
is finalized, approved and published in
VHA policy, VA will implement the
tasks and duties authorized by that
national standard of practice. Any tasks
or duties included in the national
standard will be incorporated into an
individual health care professional’s
privileges, scope of practice, or
functional statement following any
training and education necessary for the
health care professional to perform
those functions. Implementation of the
national standard of practice may be
phased in across all medical facilities,
with limited exemptions for health care
professionals as needed.
National Standard for Creative Arts
Therapists (Dance/Movement)
The proposed format for national
standards of practice when there is a
national certification and some States
require a license is as follows. The first
paragraph provides general information
about the profession and what the
health care professionals can do. The
second paragraph references the
education and certification needed to
practice this profession at VA. The third
paragraph confirms that this profession
follows the standard set by the national
certifying body. A final statement
explains that while VA only requires a
national certification, some States also
require licensure for this profession.
The standard includes information on
which States offer an exemption for
Federal employees and where VA will
preempt State laws, if applicable.
We note that the proposed standards
of practice do not contain an exhaustive
list of every task and duty that each VA
health care professional can perform.
Rather, it is designed to highlight
whether there are any areas of variance
in how this profession can practice
across States and how this profession
will be able to practice within VA
notwithstanding their State license,
certification, registration and other
requirements.
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Frm 00165
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VA qualification standards require
Dance/Movement Therapists to have an
active, current, full and unrestricted
Board Certified Dance/Movement
Therapist (BC–DMT) certification from
the Dance/Movement Therapy
Certification Board (DMTCB), the
credentialing affiliate of the American
Dance Therapy Association (ADTA).
Please note that while VA Handbook
5005, Part II, Appendix G60 refers to
this position as Creative Arts Therapists
(Dance/Movement), this position is
commonly referred to as Dance/
Movement Therapists, and we will use
that terminology throughout. The Code
of Ethics and Standards of the ADTA
and the DMTCB (developed jointly) is
followed by all VA Dance/Movement
Therapists. VA reviewed whether there
are any alternative registrations,
certifications, or State requirements that
could be required for a Dance/
Movement Therapists and found that
one State requires a license. The
standard set forth in the licensure
requirements for the State is consistent
with what is permitted under the
national certification. Therefore, there is
no variance in how Dance/Movement
Therapists practice in any State.
VA proposes to adopt a standard of
practice consistent with the national
BC–DMT certification; therefore, VA
Dance/Movement Therapists will
continue to follow the same standard as
set by their national certification. The
Code of Ethics and Standards of the
ADTA and the DMTCB can be found
here: https://www.adta.org/assets/
DMTCB/Code-of-the-ADTA-DMTCBFinal.pdf.
Because the practice of Dance/
Movement Therapists is not changing,
there will be no impact on the practice
of this occupation when this national
standard of practice is implemented.
Proposed National Standard of Practice
for Dance/Movement Therapists
1. Dance/Movement Therapists use
psychotherapeutic movement to
promote emotional, social, cognitive,
spiritualand physical integration of
theindividual, for the purpose of
improving health and well-being.Dance/
Movement Therapists observe and
assess the individual’s movements,
using verbal and nonverbal
communication to create and implement
interventions that will address the
emotional, social, physical and
cognitive integration of that individual.
2. Dance/Movement Therapists in VA
possess the education and certification
required by VA qualification standards.
See VA Handbook 5005, Staffing, Part II,
Appendix G60, dated June 7, 2019.
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 144 / Friday, July 28, 2023 / Notices
3. VA Dance/Movement Therapists
practice in accordance with the Code of
Ethics and the Standards of the ADTA
and DMTCB, available at: https://
www.adta.org/dmtcb. VA reviewed
license and certification requirements
for this occupation in June 2023 and
confirmed that all Dance/Movement
Therapists in VA follow this national
certification.
4. Although VA only requires a
certification, one State requires a State
license in order to practice as a Dance/
Movement Therapist in that State: New
York. VA reviewed license and
certification requirements for this
occupation in June 2023 and confirmed
that there is no variance in how VA
Dance/Movement Therapists practice in
any State.
Request for Information
1. Are there any required trainings for
the aforementioned practices that we
should consider?
2. Are there any factors that would
inhibit or delay the implementation of
the aforementioned practices for VA
health care professionals in any States?
3. Is there any variance in practice
that we have not listed?
4. What should we consider when
preempting conflicting State laws,
regulations, or requirements regarding
supervision of individuals working
toward obtaining their license or
unlicensed personnel?
5. Is there anything else you would
like to share with us about this national
standard of practice?
Signing Authority
Denis McDonough, Secretary of
Veterans Affairs, approved and signed
this document on July 7, 2023, and
authorized the undersigned to sign and
submit the document to the Office of the
Federal Register for publication
electronically as an official document of
the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Jeffrey M. Martin,
Assistant Director, Office of Regulation Policy
& Management, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2023–16006 Filed 7–27–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with NOTICES1
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
Notice of Request for Information on
the Department of Veterans Affairs
Creative Arts Therapists (Drama)
Standard of Practice
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Request for information.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:16 Jul 27, 2023
Jkt 259001
The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) is requesting information to
assist in developing a national standard
of practice for VA Creative Arts
Therapists (Drama). VA seeks comments
on various topics to help inform VA’s
development of this national standard of
practice.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before September 26, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be
submitted through www.regulations.gov.
Except as provided below, comments
received before the close of the
comment period will be available at
www.regulations.gov for public viewing,
inspection, or copying, including any
personally identifiable or confidential
business information that is included in
a comment. We post the comments
received before the close of the
comment period on the following
website as soon as possible after they
have been received: https://
www.regulations.gov. VA will not post
on Regulations.gov public comments
that make threats to individuals or
institutions or suggest that the
commenter will take actions to harm the
individual. VA encourages individuals
not to submit duplicative comments. We
will post acceptable comments from
multiple unique commenters even if the
content is identical or nearly identical
to other comments. Any public
comment received after the comment
period’s closing date is considered late
and will not be considered in any
potential future rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ethan Kalett, Office of Regulations,
Appeals and Policy (10BRAP), Veterans
Health Administration, Department of
Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20420, 202–461–
0500. This is not a toll-free number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Authority
Chapters 73 and 74 of 38 U.S.C. and
38 U.S.C. 303 authorize the Secretary to
regulate the professional activities of VA
health care professions to make certain
that VA’s health care system provides
safe and effective health care by
qualified health care professionals to
ensure the well-being of those Veterans
who have borne the battle.
On November 12, 2020, VA published
an interim final rule confirming that VA
health care professionals may practice
their health care profession consistent
with the scope and requirements of their
VA employment, notwithstanding any
State license, registration, certification
or other requirements that unduly
interfere with their practice. 38 CFR
17.419; 85 FR 71838. Specifically, this
PO 00000
Frm 00166
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
48951
rulemaking confirmed VA’s current
practice of allowing VA health care
professionals to deliver health care
services in a State other than the health
care professional’s State of licensure,
registration, certification or other State
requirement, thereby enhancing
beneficiaries’ access to critical VA
health care services. The rulemaking
also confirmed VA’s authority to
establish national standards of practice
for its health care professionals that
would standardize a health care
professional’s practice in all VA medical
facilities.
The rulemaking explained that a
national standard of practice describes
the tasks and duties that a VA health
care professional practicing in the
health care profession may perform and
may be permitted to undertake. Having
a national standard of practice means
that individuals from the same VA
health care profession may provide the
same type of tasks and duties regardless
of the VA medical facility where they
are located or the State license,
registration, certification or other State
requirement they hold. VA emphasized
in the rulemaking and now reiterate
herein that VA will determine, on an
individual basis, that a health care
professional has the necessary
education, training and skills to perform
the tasks and duties detailed in the
national standard of practice and will
only be able to perform such tasks and
duties after they have been incorporated
into the individual’s privileges, scope of
practice or functional statement. The
rulemaking explicitly did not create any
such national standards and directed
that all national standards of practice
would be subsequently created via
policy.
Need for National Standards of Practice
As the Nation’s largest integrated
health care system, it is critical that VA
develops national standards of practice
to ensure beneficiaries receive the same
high-quality care regardless of where
they enter the system and to ensure that
VA health care professionals can
efficiently meet the needs of
beneficiaries when practicing within the
scope of their VA employment. National
standards are designed to increase
beneficiaries’ access to safe and effective
health care, thereby improving health
outcomes. The importance of this
initiative has been underscored by the
COVID–19 pandemic. With an increased
need for mobility in our workforce,
including through VA’s Disaster
Emergency Medical Personnel System,
creating a uniform standard of practice
better supports VA health care
professionals who already frequently
E:\FR\FM\28JYN1.SGM
28JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 144 (Friday, July 28, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48949-48951]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-16006]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS
Notice of Request for Information on the Department of Veterans
Affairs Creative Arts Therapists (Dance/Movement) Standard of Practice
AGENCY: Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).
ACTION: Request for information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Dance/Movement Therapists use psychotherapeutic movement to
promote emotional, social, cognitive, spiritual and physical
integration of the individual for the purpose of improving health and
well-being. VA is requesting information to assist in developing a
national standard of practice for VA Creative Arts Therapists (Dance/
Movement). VA seeks comments on various topics to help inform VA's
development of this national standard of practice.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before September 26, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Comments must be submitted through www.regulations.gov.
Except as provided below, comments received before the close of the
comment period will be available at www.regulations.gov for public
viewing, inspection, or copying, including any personally identifiable
or confidential business information that is included in a comment. We
post the comments received before the close of the comment period on
the following website as soon as possible after they have been
received: https://www.regulations.gov. VA will not post on
Regulations.gov public comments that make threats to individuals or
institutions or suggest that the commenter will take actions to harm
the individual. VA encourages individuals not to submit duplicative
comments. We will post acceptable comments from multiple unique
commenters even if the content is identical or nearly identical to
other comments. Any public comment received after the comment period's
closing date is considered late and will not be considered in any
potential future rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ethan Kalett, Office of Regulations,
Appeals and Policy (10BRAP), Veterans Health Administration, Department
of Veterans Affairs, 810 Vermont Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20420, 202-
461-0500. This is not a toll-free number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority
Chapters 73 and 74 of 38 U.S.C. and 38 U.S.C. 303 authorize the
Secretary to regulate the professional activities of VA health care
professions to make certain that VA's health care system provides safe
and effective health care by qualified health care professionals to
ensure the well-being of those Veterans who have borne the battle.
On November 12, 2020, VA published an interim final rule confirming
that VA health care professionals may practice their health care
profession consistent with the scope and requirements of their VA
employment, notwithstanding any State license, registration,
certification, or other requirements that unduly interfere with their
practice. 38 CFR 17.419; 85 FR 71838. Specifically, this rulemaking
confirmed VA's current practice of allowing VA health care
professionals to deliver health care services in a State other than the
health care professional's State of licensure, registration,
certification, or other State requirement, thereby enhancing
beneficiaries' access to critical VA health care services. The
rulemaking also confirmed VA's authority to establish national
standards of practice for its health care professionals that would
standardize a health care professional's practice in all VA medical
facilities.
The rulemaking explained that a national standard of practice
describes the tasks and duties that a VA health care professional
practicing in the health care profession may perform and may be
permitted to undertake. Having a national standard of practice means
that individuals from the same VA health care profession may provide
the same type of tasks and duties regardless of the VA medical facility
where they are located or the State license, registration,
certification, or other State requirement they hold. We emphasized in
the rulemaking and reiterate here that VA will determine, on an
individual basis, that a health care professional has the necessary
education, training and skills to perform the tasks and duties detailed
in the national standard of practice and will only be able to perform
such tasks and duties after they have been incorporated into the
individual's privileges, scope of practice, or functional statement.
The rulemaking explicitly did not create any such national standards
and directed that all national standards of practice would be
subsequently created via policy.
Need for National Standards of Practice
As the Nation's largest integrated health care system, it is
critical that VA develops national standards of practice to ensure
beneficiaries receive the same high-quality care regardless of where
they enter the system and to ensure that VA health care professionals
can efficiently meet the needs of beneficiaries when practicing within
the scope of their VA employment. National standards are designed to
increase beneficiaries' access to safe and effective health care,
thereby improving health outcomes. The importance of this initiative
has been underscored by the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic. With an
increased need for mobility in our workforce, including through VA's
Disaster Emergency Medical Personnel System, creating a uniform
standard of practice better supports VA health care professionals who
already frequently practice across State lines. In addition, the
development of national standards of practice aligns with VA's long-
term deployment of a new electronic health record (EHR). National
standards of practice are critical for optimal EHR implementation to
enable the specific roles for each health care profession in EHR to be
consistent across the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) and to
support increased interoperability between VA and the Department of
Defense (DoD). DoD has historically standardized practice for certain
health care professionals, and VHA closely partnered with DoD to learn
from their experience.
Process To Develop National Standards of Practice
Consistent with 38 CFR 17.419, VA is developing national standards
of practice via policy. There will be one overarching national standard
of practice directive that will generally describe VHA's policy and
have each individual national standard of practice as an appendix to
the directive. The directive and all appendices will be
[[Page 48950]]
accessible on VHA Publications website at: https://vaww.va.gov/vhapublications/ (internal) and https://www.va.gov/vhapublications/
(external) once published.
To develop these national standards, VA is using a robust,
interactive process that is consistent with the guidance outlined in
Executive Order (E.O.) 13132 to preempt State law. The process includes
consultation with internal and external stakeholders, including State
licensing boards, VA employees, professional associations, Veterans
Service Organizations, labor partners and others. For each identified
VA occupation, a workgroup comprised of health care professionals
conducts State variance research to identify internal best practices
that may not be authorized under every State license, certification, or
registration, but would enhance the practice and efficiency of the
profession throughout the agency. The workgroup is comprised of VA
employees who are health care professionals in the identified
occupation; they may consult with internal stakeholders at any point
throughout the process. If a best practice is identified that is not
currently authorized by every State, the workgroup determines what
education, training and skills are required to perform such task or
duty. The workgroup then drafts a proposed VA national standard of
practice using the data gathered during the State variance research and
incorporates internal stakeholder feedback to date.
The proposed national standard of practice is internally reviewed,
to include by an interdisciplinary workgroup consisting of
representatives from Quality Management; Field Chief of Staff; Academic
Affiliates; Field Chief Nursing Officer; Ethics; Workforce Management
and Consulting; Surgery; Credentialing and Privileging; Field Chief
Medical Officer; and EHR Modernization.
Externally, the proposed national standard of practice is provided
to our partners in DoD. In addition, VA labor partners are engaged
informally as part of a pre-decisional collaboration. Consistent with
E.O. 13132, a letter is sent to each State board and certifying
organization that includes the proposed national standard and an
opportunity to further discuss the national standard with VA. After the
States and certifying organization have received notification, the
proposed national standard of practice is published to the Federal
Register for 60 days to obtain feedback from the public, including
professional associations and unions. At the same time, the proposed
national standard is published on an internal VA site to obtain
feedback from VA employees. Feedback from State boards, professional
associations, unions, VA employees and any other person or organization
who informally provides comments via the Federal Register will be
reviewed. VA will make appropriate revisions in light of the comments,
including those that present evidence-based practice and alternatives
that help VA meet our mission and goals, and that are better for
Veterans or VA health care professionals. We will publish a collective
response to all comments at https://www.va.gov/standardsofpractice.
After the national standard of practice is finalized, approved and
published in VHA policy, VA will implement the tasks and duties
authorized by that national standard of practice. Any tasks or duties
included in the national standard will be incorporated into an
individual health care professional's privileges, scope of practice, or
functional statement following any training and education necessary for
the health care professional to perform those functions. Implementation
of the national standard of practice may be phased in across all
medical facilities, with limited exemptions for health care
professionals as needed.
National Standard for Creative Arts Therapists (Dance/Movement)
The proposed format for national standards of practice when there
is a national certification and some States require a license is as
follows. The first paragraph provides general information about the
profession and what the health care professionals can do. The second
paragraph references the education and certification needed to practice
this profession at VA. The third paragraph confirms that this
profession follows the standard set by the national certifying body. A
final statement explains that while VA only requires a national
certification, some States also require licensure for this profession.
The standard includes information on which States offer an exemption
for Federal employees and where VA will preempt State laws, if
applicable.
We note that the proposed standards of practice do not contain an
exhaustive list of every task and duty that each VA health care
professional can perform. Rather, it is designed to highlight whether
there are any areas of variance in how this profession can practice
across States and how this profession will be able to practice within
VA notwithstanding their State license, certification, registration and
other requirements.
VA qualification standards require Dance/Movement Therapists to
have an active, current, full and unrestricted Board Certified Dance/
Movement Therapist (BC-DMT) certification from the Dance/Movement
Therapy Certification Board (DMTCB), the credentialing affiliate of the
American Dance Therapy Association (ADTA). Please note that while VA
Handbook 5005, Part II, Appendix G60 refers to this position as
Creative Arts Therapists (Dance/Movement), this position is commonly
referred to as Dance/Movement Therapists, and we will use that
terminology throughout. The Code of Ethics and Standards of the ADTA
and the DMTCB (developed jointly) is followed by all VA Dance/Movement
Therapists. VA reviewed whether there are any alternative
registrations, certifications, or State requirements that could be
required for a Dance/Movement Therapists and found that one State
requires a license. The standard set forth in the licensure
requirements for the State is consistent with what is permitted under
the national certification. Therefore, there is no variance in how
Dance/Movement Therapists practice in any State.
VA proposes to adopt a standard of practice consistent with the
national BC-DMT certification; therefore, VA Dance/Movement Therapists
will continue to follow the same standard as set by their national
certification. The Code of Ethics and Standards of the ADTA and the
DMTCB can be found here: https://www.adta.org/assets/DMTCB/Code-of-the-ADTA-DMTCB-Final.pdf.
Because the practice of Dance/Movement Therapists is not changing,
there will be no impact on the practice of this occupation when this
national standard of practice is implemented.
Proposed National Standard of Practice for Dance/Movement Therapists
1. Dance/Movement Therapists use psychotherapeutic movement to
promote emotional, social, cognitive, spiritualand physical integration
of theindividual, for the purpose of improving health and well-
being.Dance/Movement Therapists observe and assess the individual's
movements, using verbal and nonverbal communication to create and
implement interventions that will address the emotional, social,
physical and cognitive integration of that individual.
2. Dance/Movement Therapists in VA possess the education and
certification required by VA qualification standards. See VA Handbook
5005, Staffing, Part II, Appendix G60, dated June 7, 2019.
[[Page 48951]]
3. VA Dance/Movement Therapists practice in accordance with the
Code of Ethics and the Standards of the ADTA and DMTCB, available at:
https://www.adta.org/dmtcb. VA reviewed license and certification
requirements for this occupation in June 2023 and confirmed that all
Dance/Movement Therapists in VA follow this national certification.
4. Although VA only requires a certification, one State requires a
State license in order to practice as a Dance/Movement Therapist in
that State: New York. VA reviewed license and certification
requirements for this occupation in June 2023 and confirmed that there
is no variance in how VA Dance/Movement Therapists practice in any
State.
Request for Information
1. Are there any required trainings for the aforementioned
practices that we should consider?
2. Are there any factors that would inhibit or delay the
implementation of the aforementioned practices for VA health care
professionals in any States?
3. Is there any variance in practice that we have not listed?
4. What should we consider when preempting conflicting State laws,
regulations, or requirements regarding supervision of individuals
working toward obtaining their license or unlicensed personnel?
5. Is there anything else you would like to share with us about
this national standard of practice?
Signing Authority
Denis McDonough, Secretary of Veterans Affairs, approved and signed
this document on July 7, 2023, and authorized the undersigned to sign
and submit the document to the Office of the Federal Register for
publication electronically as an official document of the Department of
Veterans Affairs.
Jeffrey M. Martin,
Assistant Director, Office of Regulation Policy & Management, Office of
General Counsel, Department of Veterans Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2023-16006 Filed 7-27-23; 8:45 am]
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