Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
The hospital shall have an organized medical staff that
operates under bylaws approved by the governing body.
(a) Medical staff accountability.
The medical staff shall be organized and accountable to
the governing body for the quality of the medical care provided to all
patients.
(1) The medical staff shall
establish objective standards of care and conduct to be followed by all
practitioners granted privileges at the hospital. Those standards shall:
(i) be consistent with prevailing standards
of medical and other licensed health care practitioner standards of practice
and conduct; and
(ii) afford
patients their rights as patients in accordance with the provisions of this
Part.
(2) The medical
staff shall establish mechanisms to monitor the ongoing performance in
delivering patient care of practitioners granted privileges at the hospital,
including monitoring of practitioner compliance with bylaws of the medical
staff and pertinent hospital policies and procedures.
(3) The medical staff shall review and, when
appropriate, recommend to the governing body, the limitation or suspension of
the privileges of practitioners who do not practice in compliance with the
scope of their privileges, medical staff bylaws, standards of performance and
policies and procedures, and assure that corrective measures are developed and
put into place, when necessary.
(4)
The medical staff shall adopt, implement, periodically update and submit to the
department evidence-based protocols for the early recognition and treatment of
patients with severe sepsis and septic shock ("sepsis protocols") that are
based on generally accepted standards of care. Sepsis protocols must include
components specific to the identification, care and treatment of adults, and of
children, and must clearly identify where and when components will differ for
adults and for children. These protocols must include the following components:
(i) a process for the screening and early
recognition of patients with sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shock;
(ii) a process to rapidly identify and
document individuals appropriate for treatment through severe sepsis and septic
shock protocols, including explicit criteria defining those patients who should
be excluded from the protocols, such as patients with certain clinical
conditions or who have elected palliative care;
(iii) guidelines for hemodynamic support,
including monitoring, therapeutic endpoints and timeframe goals;
(iv) for infants and children, guidelines for
fluid resuscitation with explicit timeframes for vascular access and fluid
delivery consistent with current, evidence-based guidelines for severe sepsis
and septic shock with defined therapeutic goals for children; and
(v) a procedure for identification of
infectious source and delivery of early antibiotics with timeframe
goals.
(5) The medical
staff shall ensure that professional staff with direct patient care
responsibilities and, as appropriate, staff with indirect patient care
responsibilities, including, but not limited to laboratory and pharmacy staff,
are periodically trained to implement sepsis protocols required pursuant to
paragraph (4) of this subdivision. Medical staff shall ensure updated training
when the hospital initiates substantive changes to the protocols.
(6) Hospitals must update sepsis protocols
required pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subdivision based on newly emerging
evidence-based standards. Protocols are to be submitted to the department at
the request of the department.
(7)
Collection and reporting of sepsis measures.
(i) The medical staff shall be responsible
for the collection, use, and reporting of quality measures related to the
recognition and treatment of severe sepsis for purposes of internal quality
improvement and hospital reporting to the department. Such measures shall
include, but not be limited to, data sufficient to evaluate each hospital's
adherence to timeframes and implementation of all protocol components for
adults and children.
(ii) Hospitals
shall submit data specified by the department to permit the department to
develop risk-adjusted severe sepsis and septic shock mortality rates in
consultation with appropriate national, hospital and expert stakeholders.
Hospitals shall submit data to the department or the department's designee in
the form and format, and according to such specifications as may be required by
the department.
(iii) Such data
shall be reported annually, or more frequently at the request of the
department, and shall be subject to audit at the discretion of the
department.
(8)
Definitions.
Sepsis is a life threatening medical emergency that
requires early recognition and intervention. For the purposes of hospital data
collection, the following terms shall have the following meanings:
(i)
sepsis shall mean a
confirmed or suspected infection accompanied by two systemic inflammatory
response syndrome (SIRS) criteria;
(ii)
severe sepsis shall
mean sepsis complicated by organ dysfunction; and
(iii) for adults, septic
shock shall mean sepsis-induced hypotension persisting despite
adequate IV fluid resuscitation and/or evidence of tissue hypoperfusion; for
pediatrics, septic shock shall mean sepsis and cardiovascular
organ dysfunction.
(b) Organization.
(1) The medical staff shall be organized in a
manner appropriate to the size of the institution and the services
provided.
(2) The responsibility
for organization and conduct of the medical staff shall be developed and
defined in writing in consultation with the medical staff and assigned to the
medical director who is a physician appointed by the governing body in
accordance with section
405.2(e)(2) of
this Part, based upon written qualifications for the position.
(3) The medical staff shall be composed of
persons practicing medicine as defined in article 131 of title 8 of the State
Education Law, and may also be composed of other licensed and currently
registered health care practitioners appointed by the governing body.
(4) The medical staff shall examine
credentials of candidates for medical staff membership and make recommendations
to the governing body on the appointment of the candidates in accordance with
the provisions of this Part and the New York State Public Health Law. Following
the initial appointment of medical staff members, the medical staff shall
conduct periodic reappraisals of its members, on at least a triennial
basis.
(5) Medical staff
appointments, and reappointments shall be made in accordance with the privilege
review procedures of the hospital's quality assurance committee, as contained
in section
405.6 of this Part.
(6) In order that the working conditions and
working hours of physicians and postgraduate trainees promote the provision of
quality medical care, the hospital shall establish the following limits on
working hours for certain members of the medical staff and postgraduate
trainees:
(i) In hospitals with over 15,000
unscheduled visits to an emergency service per year, assignment of postgraduate
trainees and attending physicians shall be limited to no more than 12
consecutive hours per on-duty assignment in the emergency service. The
commissioner may approve alternative schedule limits of up to 15 hours for
attending physicians in a hospital emergency service upon a determination that:
(a) the alternative schedule contributes to
the hospital's ability to meet its community's need for quality emergency
services;
(b) the volume of
patients examined and treated during the extended period is substantially less
than for other hours of the day; and
(c) adequate rest time is provided between
assignments and during each week to prevent fatigue.
(ii) Effective July 1, 1989, schedules of
postgraduate trainees with inpatient care responsibilities shall meet the
following criteria:
(a) the scheduled work
week shall not exceed an average of 80 hours per week over a four week
period;
(b) such trainees shall not
be scheduled to work for more than 24 consecutive hours;
(c) for departments other than
anesthesiology, family practice, medical, surgical, obstetrical, pediatric or
other services which have a high volume of acutely ill patients, and where
night calls are infrequent and physician rest time is adequate, the medical
staff may develop and document scheduling arrangements other than those set
forth in clauses (a) and (b) of this
subparagraph; and
(d) "on call"
duty in the hospital during the night shift hours by trainees in surgery shall
not be included in the 24-limit contained in clause (
b) of
this subparagraph and the 80-hour limit contained in clause
(
a) of this subparagraph if:
(1) the hospital can document that during
such night shifts postgraduate trainees are generally resting and that
interruptions for patient care are infrequent and limited to patients for whom
the postgraduate trainee has continuing responsibility;
(2) such duty is scheduled for each trainee
no more often than every third night;
(3) a continuous assignment that includes
night shift "on call" duty is followed by a nonworking period of no less than
16 hours; and
(4) policies and
procedures are developed and implemented to immediately relieve a postgraduate
trainee from a continuing assignment when fatigue due to an unusually active
"on call" period is observed.
(iii) The medical staff shall develop and
implement policies relating to postgraduate trainee schedules which prescribe
limits on the assigned responsibilities of postgraduate trainees, including but
not limited to, assignment to care of new patients, as the duration of daily
on-duty assignments progress.
(iv)
In determining limits on working hours of postgraduate trainees as set forth in
subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of this paragraph, the medical staff shall require
that scheduled on- duty assignments be separated by not less than eight
nonworking hours. Postgraduate trainees shall have at least one 24 hour period
of scheduled nonworking time per week.
(v) Hospitals employing postgraduate trainees
shall adopt and enforce specific policies governing dual employment. Such
policies shall require at a minimum, that each trainee notify the hospital of
employment outside the hospital and the hours devoted to such employment.
Postgraduate trainees who have worked the maximum number of hours permitted in
subparagraphs (i)-(iv) of this paragraph shall be prohibited from working
additional hours as physicians providing professional patient care
services.
(c)
Medical staff bylaws.
The medical staff shall adopt and enforce bylaws to carry
out its responsibilities. The bylaws shall at a minimum:
(1) be approved by the governing
body;
(2) include a statement of
the obligations and prerogatives of each category of medical staff
membership;
(3) describe the
organization of the medical staff;
(4) describe the qualifications and
performance standards to be met by a candidate in order for the medical staff
to recommend that the candidate be appointed by the governing body;
(5) set forth criteria and procedures for
recommending the privileges to be granted to individual practitioners, contain
a procedure for applying the criteria and procedures to individuals requesting
privileges, and be consistent with the requirements contained in section
405.6 of this Part;
(6) set forth criteria and procedures for
determining the need for consultation with a specialist physician to provide
for the diagnosis and treatment of patient conditions in accordance with
generally accepted standards of patient care. Such criteria and procedures
shall not preclude postgraduate trainees, nurses, or other health care
practitioners involved in the care of the patient from requesting such
consultations in an emergency;
(7)
describe the responsibilities of members of the medical staff for participation
in the malpractice prevention program and the quality assurance
program;
(8) exempt from the
requirement to obtain medical staff privileges those practitioners from outside
organ procurement organizations designated by the Secretary, U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, engaged solely at the hospital in the harvesting of
tissues and/or other body parts for transplantation, therapy, research or
educational purposes pursuant to the Federal Anatomical Gift Act and the
requirements of section
405.25 of this Part;
(9) exempt from liability by the hospital any
physician who shall inform a patient that he or she refuses to give advice with
respect to, or participate in, any induced termination of pregnancy;
and
(10) set forth criteria and
procedures that ensure appropriate and confidential use of electronic or
computer transmissions and authentications, including the identification of
those categories of practitioners and hospital personnel who are authorized to
utilize electronic or computer generated transmissions, if the hospital elects
to utilize an electronic or computer system for transmitting or authenticating
medical records entries, orders and/or other patient specific
records.
(d) Dental
services.
(1) The attending dentist shall be
responsible for the admission, management and discharge of dental patients,
including all related written documentation.
(2) The admission history and physical
examination for dental patients shall be completed by a dentist qualified to
perform a history and physical examination or by another member of the medical
staff so qualified. A dentist qualified to perform a history and physical
examination shall mean a dentist who:
(i) has
successfully completed a postgraduate program of study incorporating training
in physical diagnosis at least equivalent to that received by one who has
successfully completed a postgraduate program of study in oral and
maxillofacial surgery accredited by a nationally recognized body approved by
the United States Education Department; and
(ii) as determined by the medical staff, is
currently competent to conduct a complete history and physical examination to
determine a patient's ability to undergo a proposed dental procedure.
(3) Dental patients with medical
comorbidities or complications present upon admission or arising during
hospitalization shall be referred to appropriate medical staff for consultation
and/or management.
(e)
Registered physician's assistants and registered specialist's assistants.
Hospitals employing or extending privileges to registered
physician's assistants or registered specialist's assistants shall comply with
the provisions of this subdivision and Part 94 of this Title.
(1) General standards. Hospitals shall:
(i) employ or extend privileges only to
registered physician's assistants and registered specialist's assistants who
are currently registered with the New York State Education
Department;
(ii) designate in
writing the licensed and currently registered staff physician or physicians
responsible for the supervision and direction of each registered physician's
assistant and registered specialist's assistant employed or extended
privileges:
(a) no physician shall be
designated to supervise and direct more than six registered physician's
assistants or registered specialist's assistants or a combination
thereof;
(b) when more than one
physician is designated as responsible for registered physician's assistants or
registered specialist's assistants, written policies and procedures shall
delineate the specific physician charged with supervision of care of each
patient for whom the registered physician's assistant or registered
specialist's assistant is to render care;
(iii) employ or extend privileges only to
registered physician's assistants and registered specialist's assistants whose
training and experience are within the scope of practice for which the
physician or physicians to whom they are assigned are qualified; and
(iv) be approved for providing the
specialized medical services for which the registered specialist's assistant is
employed or extended privileges and employ and extend privileges only to
registered specialist's assistants whose training and experience are
appropriate to the delivery of the specialized service.
(2) Medical staff responsibility. The medical
staff shall adopt, with governing body approval, bylaws, rules and regulations:
(i) which provide formal procedures for the
evaluation of the application and credentials of registered physician's
assistants and registered specialist's assistants applying for employment or
privileges in the facility for the purpose of providing medical services under
the supervision of a physician; and
(ii) which set forth in writing, the
mechanism or mechanisms by which the supervising physicians shall exercise
continuous supervision over the registered physician's assistants or registered
specialist's assistants for whom he or she is responsible.
(f) Postgraduate trainees.
Patient care services may be provided by physicians in
postgraduate training programs accredited by the Accreditation Council for
Graduate Medical Education or the American Osteopathic Association or an
equivalent accrediting agency approved by the New York State Education
Department, only if the following conditions are met:
(1) all postgraduate trainees prior to
entering a postgraduate training program, have received adequate and
appropriate medical education as defined in subparagraphs (i) and (ii) of this
paragraph:
(i) effective January 1, 1986 and
thereafter, hospitals shall permit only the following to be assigned into a
postgraduate training position:
(a) a
graduate of a medical school offering a medical program accredited by the
Liaison Committee on Medical Education or the American Osteopathic Association
or registered with the New York State Education Department or by an accrediting
organization acceptable to the New York State Education Department;
or
(b) a graduate of a foreign
medical school who has been certified by the Educational Commission for Foreign
Medical Graduates (ECFMG) as meeting the requirements of the ECFMG and has been
awarded the ECFMG certificate;
(ii) except for individuals eligible for
licensure under section 6528 of the State Education Law, a graduate of a
foreign medical school who enrolled in such medical school after October 1,
1983 shall have completed the clinical component of a program of medical
education which:
(a) included no more than 12
weeks of clinical clerkships in a country other than the country in which the
medical school is located;
(b)
included clinical clerkships of greater than 12 weeks in a country other than
the country in which the medical school is located if the clinical clerkships
were offered by a medical school approved by the State Education Department for
the purposes of clinical clerkships;
(2) the medical staff shall review the
licensure, education, training, physical and mental capacity, and experience of
individuals in approved postgraduate medical training programs in relation to
the patient care services to be provided by such individuals in such training
programs where such individuals do not otherwise have active medical staff
privileges.
(i) such individuals may provide
patient care services only as part of a training program accredited by the
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education or American Osteopathic
Association, or an equivalent training program approved by the State Education
Department;
(ii) the medical staff
shall, based on written criteria, recommend privileges that are specific to
treatments/procedures for each individual in such program prior to delivery of
patient care services;
(iii) the
medical staff shall develop and implement written policies and procedures which
set forth a clear set of principles governing medical practice by postgraduate
trainees, including guidelines on circumstances requiring supervision and
consultation;
(iv) postgraduate
trainee privileges, regardless of whether the individual is full-time,
part-time, or rotating status, shall be modified based upon written criteria
and individual review and approval of each trainee;
(v) the specific treatments/procedures that
each individual is authorized to perform shall be stated in writing and that
authorization shall specify:
(a) those
treatments/procedures that may be performed under the general control and
supervision of the patient's attending physician or another physician
credentialed to provide the specific treatment/procedures; and
(b) those that may only be performed under
direct visual supervision of the patient's attending physician or another
physician credentialed to provide the specific treatment/procedures;
and
(3) the
medical staff monitors and supervises postgraduate trainees assigned patient
care responsibilities as part of an approved medical training program
including:
(i) providing written
documentation of privileges granted to such individuals to appropriate medical
and other hospital patient care staff;
(ii) continuously monitoring patient care
services provided by such individuals to assure provision of quality patient
care services within the scope of privileges granted;
(iii) effective July 1, 1989 for postgraduate
trainees in the acute care specialties of anesthesiology, family practice,
medicine, obstetrics, pediatrics, psychiatry, and surgery, supervision shall be
provided by physicians who are board-certified or admissible in those
respective specialties or who have completed a minimum of four postgraduate
years of training in such specialty. There shall be a sufficient number of
these physicians present in person in the hospital 24 hours per day, seven days
per week to supervise the postgraduate trainees in their specific specialities
to meet reasonable and expected demand. In hospitals that can document that the
patients' attending physicians are immediately available by telephone and
readily available in person when needed, the onsite supervision of routine
hospital care and procedures may be carried out in accordance with paragraph
(2) of this subdivision by postgraduate trainees who are in their final year of
postgraduate training, or who have completed at least three years of
postgraduate training;
(iv)
supervision by attending physicians of the care provided to surgery patients by
postgraduates in training must include as a minimum:
(a) personal supervision of all surgical
procedures requiring general anesthesia or an operating room
procedure;
(b) preoperative
examination and assessment by the attending physician; and
(c) postoperative examination and assessment
no less frequently than daily by the attending physician;
(v) taking disciplinary action and other
corrective measures against the individual providing service and/or the
attending/supervising physician when services provided exceed scope of
privileges granted; and
(vi) taking
disciplinary action or other corrective measures against any individual
providing service in violation of the physician's working hour limits set forth
in subparagraph (b)(6)(iv) of this section.
(g) Unlicensed physicians.
Patient care services may be provided by unlicensed
physicians only under the following circumstances:
(1) physicians not licensed by New York State
but who practice within the exemptions authorized by section 6526 of the State
Education Law; or
(2) physicians
who possess limited permits to practice medicine issued by the New York State
Education Department pursuant to section 6525 of the State Education Law if
such physicians are under the supervision of a physician licensed and currently
registered to practice medicine in the State of New York and if the physicians
possessing limited permits are:
(i) graduates
of medical school offering a medical program accredited by the Liaison
Committee on Medical Education or the American Osteopathic Association, or
registered with the State Education Department or accredited by an accrediting
organization acceptable to the State Education Department, and have
satisfactorily completed one year of graduate medical education in a
postgraduate training program accredited by the Accreditation Council for
Graduate Medical Education or the American Osteopathic Association, their
predecessors or successors or an equivalent accrediting agency acceptable to
the State Education Department;
(ii) graduates of a foreign medical school
and have satisfactorily completed three years of graduate medical education in
a postgraduate training program accredited by the Accreditation Council for
Graduate Medical Education or the American Osteopathic Association, their
predecessors or successors or an equivalent accrediting agency acceptable to
the State Education Department; or
(iii) graduates of a foreign medical school
who have satisfactorily completed three years in a postgraduate training
program and who are receiving advanced training as part of an official exchange
visitor program approved by the United States Information Agency and the
Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates (ECFMG);
(3) the medical staff shall:
(i) review the licensure, education,
training, physical and mental capacity, and experience of individuals
practicing under the provisions of this subdivision;
(ii) based on written criteria, recommend
privileges that are specific to treatments/procedures for each individual prior
to delivery of patient care services;
(iii) continuously monitor patient care
services provided by such individuals to assure provision of quality patient
care services within the scope of privileges granted; and
(iv) take disciplinary action or other
corrective measures against the individual providing service and/or the
attending/supervising physician when services provided exceed the scope of
privileges granted.
(h) Medical students.
Medical students, in the course of their educational
curriculum, may take patient histories, perform complete physical examinations
and enter findings in the medical record of the patient with the approval of
the patient's attending physician. All medical student entries must be
countersigned within 24 hours by an appropriately privileged physician. Medical
students may be assigned and directed to provide additional patient care
services under the direct in person supervision of an attending physician or
authorized postgraduate trainee. The hospital, in cooperation with the medical
staff and the medical school, shall provide such appropriate supervision and
documentation of all procedures performed by medical students. In addition,
specific identified procedures may be performed by medical students under the
general supervision of an attending physician or authorized senior postgraduate
trainee provided that the medical staff and the medical school affirm in
writing each individual student's competence to perform such procedures.
Documentation of supervision and competence of medical students shall be
incorporated into the quality assurance program of the hospital and its
affiliation agreement with the medical school. In all such patient care
contacts, the patient shall be made aware that the individual performing the
procedure is a student.
(i)
Autopsies.
The medical staff shall attempt to secure permission for
autopsies in all cases of unusual deaths and deaths of medical-legal and
educational value. The mechanism for documenting permission to perform an
autopsy shall be defined in writing. There shall be a system for notifying the
medical staff, and specifically the attending physician, when an autopsy is to
be performed.