New Jersey Administrative Code
Title 13 - LAW AND PUBLIC SAFETY
Chapter 39A - STATE BOARD OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
Subchapter 8 - ADVERTISING
Section 13:39A-8.1 - Advertising and solicitation practices
Current through Register Vol. 56, No. 18, September 16, 2024
(a) The following words and terms, when used in this section, shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(b) A licensee may provide information to the public by advertising in print or electronic media.
(c) A licensee who engages in the use of advertising which contains any of the following shall be deemed to have engaged in professional misconduct:
(d) Any violations of (e) through (i) below shall be deemed professional misconduct.
(e) The Board may require a licensed physical therapist to substantiate the truthfulness of any assertion or representation set forth in an advertisement.
(f) A licensee shall not engage, either directly or through the use of any agent, employee or representative, in solicitation of a prospective patient or a consumer. This subsection shall not prohibit a licensed physical therapist from offering services through materials provided to a community service organization which makes known the availability of all professional services listed; nor shall it prohibit the offering of services by a licensed physical therapist to any bona fide representative of prospective patients including, but not limited to, employers, labor union representatives or insurance carriers.
(g) Advertising making reference to or setting forth fees shall be limited to that which contains a stated fee schedule for specifically described routine professional services or goods offered by licensees.
(h) The time period during which an advertised fee will remain in effect shall be set forth on the face of the advertisement. In the absence of such disclosure, the effective period shall be deemed to be 30 days from the date of the advertisement's final publication.
(i) Any licensed physical therapist advertising certification in a specialty area shall possess certification by a certifying entity and shall maintain documentary proof of certification from the entity as part of his or her records. A licensed physical therapist who advertises a specialty certification shall include the full name of the certification and the certifying entity in any advertisements and, except as provided in (j) below, shall not use initials or acronyms for the certification or certifying entity. For example, except as provided in (j) below, a licensee may indicate in advertisements that he or she is an Orthopaedic Clinical Specialist certified by the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties but shall not indicate that he or she is an OCS certified by the ABPTS.
(j) A licensed physical therapist who has included the full name of a certification and certifying entity in an advertisement pursuant to (i) above may use initials or acronyms for that certification immediately following its full name. For example, a licensed physical therapist who indicates that he or she is an Orthopaedic Clinical Specialist certified by the American Board of Physical Therapists in an advertisement may use the acronyms OCS and ABPTS after these full names (Orthopaedic Clinical Specialist (OCS) by the American Board of Physical Therapists (ABPTS).