Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 3, September 1, 2024
RELATES TO: KRS Chapter 13B, 218A.205, 311.565(1)(i),
311.591(3), 311.592, 311.593, 311.595, 311.852
NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY:
KRS
311.565(1)(i) authorizes the
board to promulgate administrative regulations to promote the efficient and
fair conduct of disciplinary proceedings. This administrative regulation
establishes the procedure to be followed in handling emergency proceedings in
regard to any licensee before the board.
Section
1. Authority to Issue Emergency Order; Timing.
(1) An inquiry panel or the panel's chair,
acting on behalf of the inquiry panel, may issue an emergency order restricting
or suspending a licensee's license to practice within the Commonwealth of
Kentucky in accordance with
KRS
311.592 and
13B.125.
(2) An inquiry panel shall make this
determination following a completed investigation pursuant to
KRS
311.591(3) at a regularly
scheduled meeting of the inquiry panel.
(3)
(a) An
inquiry panel's chair may act on behalf of the inquiry panel and issue an
emergency order restricting or suspending a licensee's license to practice
within the Commonwealth of Kentucky if the panel chair determines that a basis
for an emergency order as established in subsection (1) of this section exists
and the circumstances of the specific case warrant emergency action prior to
the next regularly scheduled meeting of the inquiry panel.
(b) If an emergency hearing is scheduled
prior to the next regularly scheduled meeting of the inquiry panel, the panel
chair may act on behalf of the inquiry panel and issue the complaint required
to support the continuation of the emergency order.
(c) If the panel chair acts on behalf of the
inquiry panel pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) of this subsection, the panel
chair shall report any action to the inquiry panel at its next regularly
scheduled meeting.
Section
2. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.
(1) The inquiry panel, or the panel chair
acting on the panel's behalf, may consider any evidence or information in
making a charging decision pursuant to
KRS
311.591(3) or in making the
determination to issue an emergency order pursuant to Section 1 of this
administrative regulation. The evidence or information may include:
(a) An application for licensing or renewal
filed by the licensee with any licensing board;
(b) Any prior or current order issued by the
board or one (1) of its panels affecting the licensee's Kentucky
license;
(c) Any prior or current
order issued by another state's licensing authority affecting the licensee's
license in that state;
(d) The
records of any criminal proceeding involving the licensee;
(e) A report by or record of any governmental
agency, including a law enforcement agency report, a Kentucky All Schedule
Prescription Electronic Reporting (KASPER) report or summary, or a reference to
a governmental agency or KASPER report;
(f) Patient records maintained by the
licensee, or summaries of or references to the contents of those
records;
(g) Records or reports
issued or maintained by a pharmacy;
(h) Records or reports issued or maintained
by a hospital, including a peer review report relating to the licensee or
medical records of a patient treated by the licensee in the hospital;
(i) Records or reports issued or
maintained by any business;
(j) An
investigative report prepared by a board investigator, including any summary of
a verbal or written statement by a witness or an evidentiary document reviewed
by an investigator;
(k) An
investigative report prepared by a board investigator involving another
investigation conducted by the board relating to the licensee;
(l) An oral or written statement by the
licensee, or the licensee's agent, relating to the investigation;
(m) A report of a clinical skills assessment
relating to the licensee, including a report by a board-approved assessor,
including the Center for Personalized Education for Physicians (CPEP) or
LifeGuard;
(n) A physical, mental,
or substance abuse evaluation or assessment of the licensee;
(o) A written report of a patient record
review conducted by a consultant under contract with the board to perform
reviews; or
(p) A written report of
a patient record review conducted by a licensed professional performing a
review on behalf of the licensee.
(2) The evidence or information considered by
the inquiry panel or panel chair, acting on behalf of the inquiry panel, shall
constitute the board's record of proceedings relating to the issuance of an
emergency order of restriction or suspension.
(3) If the inquiry panel or the panel chair,
acting on behalf of the inquiry panel, issues an emergency order of restriction
or suspension against a licensee's license, the emergency order shall be a
written order and shall include findings of fact and conclusions of law,
supported by the board's record of proceedings, upon which the agency bases the
emergency order.
(4) Any emergency
order shall be served upon the affected licensee in the manner specified in
KRS
13B.050(2). The emergency
order shall become effective immediately upon receipt by the affected licensee
or the licensee's representative.
Section 3. Authority to Issue Emergency Order
of Suspension Upon Felony Indictment.
(1) If a
licensee is indicted in any state for a crime classified as a felony in that
state and the conduct charged relates to a controlled substance, that
licensee's practice shall be considered an immediate danger to the public
health, safety, or welfare pursuant to
KRS
311.592,
311.852,
and
13B.125.
(2) If the board receives verifiable
information that a licensee has been indicted in any state for a crime
classified as a felony in the state of indictment and the conduct charged
relates to a controlled substance, the inquiry panel or panel chair, acting on
behalf of the inquiry panel, shall immediately issue an emergency order
suspending or restricting that licensee's Kentucky license to prohibit the
licensee from prescribing, dispensing, administering, or otherwise utilizing a
controlled substance in Kentucky, until further order following the final
resolution of the criminal charges in the indictment.
(3) The emergency order of suspension shall
remain in effect until:
(a) The criminal
charges contained in the indictment are finally resolved; and
(b) The board's hearing panel has finally
resolved the matter after receipt of the court documents finally resolving the
criminal charges in the indictment.
Section 4. Request for and Timing of
Emergency Hearing; Waiver.
(1) A licensee
required to comply with an emergency order may request an emergency hearing at
any time between the effective date of the emergency order and the effective
date of an order finally resolving the underlying complaint.
(2)
(a) A
request for an emergency hearing shall be presented to the board in writing,
but may be submitted by facsimile or email.
(b) Upon receipt of a written request for an
emergency hearing, the board shall schedule the emergency hearing on one (1) of
the ten (10) working days following the date of receipt of the written request.
The day on which the written request is received by the board shall not be
considered one (1) of the ten (10) working days.
(c) A written request shall be considered
received on a particular work day if it is received by the board during the
board's scheduled operating hours for that day. If the board receives a request
for an emergency hearing by facsimile or email received after scheduled
operating hours, the request shall be considered to have been received the next
scheduled work day of the board.
(3)
(a) A
written request for an emergency hearing shall be considered a certification by
the affected licensee and the licensee's counsel, if any, that the licensee is
available to participate in an emergency hearing on any of the ten (10) working
days following the date of the board's receipt of the written request for an
emergency hearing.
(b) The refusal
of the licensee to accept a hearing date on a date specified by the board
within the ten (10) working days shall constitute a waiver of the requirement
of
KRS
13B.125(3) to conduct the
emergency hearing within ten (10) working days of receipt of a
request.
(c) If there is a waiver
of the ten (10) working day requirement, the hearing officer and parties shall
schedule the emergency hearing to commence at the next date available to the
hearing officer and both parties.
(4)
(a)
Unless there is a waiver of the requirement, the board shall commence the
emergency hearing within ten (10) working days of receipt of the written
request for an emergency hearing.
(b) If the parties are unable to conclude the
emergency hearing on the initial date assigned, the emergency hearing shall
resume on the next date available to the hearing officer and both parties and
shall continue on dates available to the hearing officer and both parties until
concluded.
Section
5. Scope and Conduct of Emergency Hearing; Hearing Officer's Role.
(1) The emergency hearing shall be conducted
by the inquiry panel, its panel chair, acting on behalf of the inquiry panel,
or by a qualified hearing officer appointed by the board's executive
director.
(2) The singular function
of the party conducting the emergency hearing shall be to determine whether the
findings of fact providing the bases for the emergency order are supported by
substantial evidence and, if so, constitute one (1) or more violations of
KRS
311.595.
(3) Given the ten (10) working day
requirement of
KRS
13B.125(3) and the unique
nature of the hearing, it shall not be practicable pursuant to:
(a)
KRS
13B.125(3) to conduct the
emergency hearing in conformity with the provisions of
KRS
13B.050;
(b)
KRS
13B.060;
(c)
KRS
13B.070;
(d)
KRS
13B.080(2);
(e)
KRS
13B.080(3){as it relates to
discovery orders} or (4){to the extent it conflicts with this administrative
regulation};
(f)
KRS
13B.090(1){to the extent it
prohibits consideration of hearsay evidence}, (2) {other than the requirement
that all testimony shall be made under oath or affirmation}, (3), or
(7);
(g)
KRS 13B.110;
or
(h)
KRS
13B.120.
(4) There shall not be a motion practice,
prior to or as part of the emergency hearing, relating to the legality or
validity of the emergency order under consideration or relating to evidentiary
issues.
(5)
(a) The standards of acceptable and
prevailing practice within the Commonwealth may be determined by an expert
review of a licensee's patient records by a qualified expert.
(b) An expert review may be conducted on the
board's behalf by a licensed professional who has entered into a contractual
relationship with the board to serve as a board consultant. The contractual
relationship shall indicate that the board has determined that the professional
is legally qualified to provide an expert opinion regarding the standards of
acceptable and prevailing practice within the Commonwealth of Kentucky and
whether the affected licensee has violated those standards or committed other
professional violations of the board's statutes.
(c) The party conducting the emergency
hearing shall not conduct a separate hearing or inquiry into the qualifications
of the contractual reviewer who performed the record review on behalf of the
board or of a licensed professional who performed a record review on behalf of
the affected licensee.
(6) The emergency hearing shall be conducted
as required by KRS Chapter 13B and this subsection.
(a) The board shall produce and the hearing
officer shall accept the record of the proceedings relating to the issuance of
an emergency order under consideration.
(b)
1. The
board shall not be required to produce any further evidence to support the
emergency order.
2. The board may
call the affected licensee to testify, as if under cross-examination, regarding
the factual accuracy of evidence or information cited in the record of
proceedings relating to the issuance of the emergency order.
(c) The affected licensee may
testify, produce factual evidence, produce hearsay evidence through documents,
or call lay witnesses to the extent that the evidence specifically tends to
demonstrate that a factual statement relied upon by the board's contractual
reviewer or by the inquiry panel or panel chair, acting on behalf of the
inquiry panel, is factually incorrect or false.
(d) The affected licensee may only call the
board's contractual reviewer for the purpose of cross-examination if the
hearing officer determines on the record that the licensee's evidence has
established that one (1) or more factual statements relied upon by the
contractual reviewer in the expert report is demonstrably false or incorrect.
If the hearing officer makes that determination, the affected party may call
the board's contractual reviewer for the purpose of cross-examination under the
following conditions:
1. The cross-examination
of the board's contractual reviewer is scheduled at the earliest date available
to the reviewer and the parties that does not disrupt the normal operation of
the reviewer's professional practice and does not disrupt the care of the
reviewer's normal patients;
2. The
cross-examination of the board's contractual reviewer is limited to factual
statements and opinions rendered in the reviewer's report, and the effect upon
an opinion of a determination that one (1) or more underlying factual
statements relied upon by the reviewer is false or factually incorrect;
and
3. Upon completion of the
cross-examination, the board and the hearing officer may ask questions of the
contractual reviewer relevant to the cross-examination.
(7)
(a) Within five (5) working days of
completion of the emergency hearing, the hearing officer shall issue a written
decision in which the hearing officer shall:
1. Affirm the emergency order if there is
substantial evidence of a violation of law and the inquiry panel has determined
that a violation constitutes an immediate danger to the public health, safety,
or welfare. If there is substantial evidence of a violation of law, the hearing
officer shall not substitute his or her judgment as to the level of public
protection necessary for the emergency order;
2. Revoke the emergency order if there is no
substantial evidence of a violation of law. The findings of fact shall be found
to be supported by substantial evidence if there is a factual basis for the
findings, even if there is a conflict in the evidence or information considered
by the inquiry panel or panel chair, acting on behalf of the inquiry panel. A
finding that there is no substantial evidence to support the findings of fact
shall require a finding that there is a complete absence of factual basis for
the findings; or
3. Modify the
emergency order if the emergency order relied upon multiple violations of law
and the hearing officer has determined that there is no substantial evidence to
support one (1) or more of those violations. Upon making that finding, the
hearing officer may consider each remaining violation for which there is
substantial evidence and may modify the level of protection if the modified
protection fully protects the public health, safety, or welfare based upon the
dangers presented by the licensee's commission of each remaining
violation.
(b) The
hearing officer shall not include additional findings of fact or conclusions of
law in any written decision affirming the emergency order under consideration.
The written decision shall be sufficient if it determines that there was
substantial evidence of a violation of law and the panel had determined that
the violation constituted an immediate danger to the public health, safety, or
welfare.
(c) If the hearing officer
issues a written decision revoking or modifying the emergency order under
consideration, the hearing officer shall include findings of fact and
conclusions of law to support the action.
Section 6. Judicial Review. Judicial review
of a final order resulting from an emergency hearing shall comply with
KRS
13B.140,
13B.150,
13B.160, and
311.593.
STATUTORY AUTHORITY:
KRS
311.565(1)(a),
(i)