Current through Register Vol. 54, No. 44, November 2, 2024
A licensee who engages in unprofessional or immoral
conduct is subject to disciplinary action in accordance with section 506 of the
act (63 P. S. §
625.506).
(1) Unprofessional conduct includes the
following:
(i) Revealing personally
identifiable facts obtained as the result of a doctor-patient relationship
without the prior consent of the patient, except as authorized or required by
law.
(ii) Performing a chiropractic
service incompetently or performing a chiropractic service which the licensee
knows or has reason to know that the licensee is not competent to
perform.
(iii) Advertising a
chiropractic practice in a manner which is intended or has the tendency to
deceive the public.
(iv) Knowingly
permitting, aiding or abetting a person who is not licensed to perform
activities, requiring a license in health care practice.
(v) Continuing to practice chiropractic or to
indicate the ability to practice chiropractic while one's license is
unregistered or inactive or is suspended or revoked.
(vi) Impersonating another health care
practitioner.
(vii) Offering,
undertaking or agreeing to cure or treat a disease by a secret method,
procedure, treatment or preparation or the treating of a human condition by a
method, means or procedure which the licensee refuses to divulge to the Board
upon demand of the Board.
(viii)
Delegating a radiological procedure to a person whom the chiropractor knows or
has reason to know is not qualified to perform the proce-dure, under section
522 of the act (63 P. S. §
625.522) and
§
5.62 (relating to auxiliary
personnel who may perform radiological procedures).
(ix) Failing to exercise direct supervision
over auxiliary personnel authorized to perform radiological
procedures.
(x) Willfully engaging
in sexual activity with a patient within the scope of the chiropractor/patient
relationship or harassing, assaulting, abusing or intimidating a
patient.
(xi) Abandoning a patient.
Abandonment occurs when a licensee withdraws services after a doctor-patient
relationship has been established, by failing to give notice to the patient of
the licensee's intention to withdraw in sufficient time to allow the patient to
obtain necessary chiropractic care.
(xii) Ordering excessive tests, treatment or
use of treatment and diagnostic facilities not reasonably warranted by the
condition of the patient.
(xiii)
Failure to include the word chiropractor, chiropractic, D.C. or a derivative
thereof in advertisements, letterhead, signs and other printed
material.
(xiv) Practicing or
advertising adjunctive procedures without a certificate to use adjunctive
procedures issued by the Board.
(xv) Practicing or advertising needle
acupuncture, unless the licensee is licensed to do so by the State Board of
Medicine or the State Board of Osteopathic Medicine and acting in accordance
with the Acupuncture Licensure Act (63 P. S. §§ 1801-1806.1) and
regulations of the State Board of Medicine in §§
18.11-18.18 (relating to licensure and
practice of acupuncturists and practitioners of oriental medicine) or
regulations of the State Board of Osteopathic Medicine in §§
25.301-25.308 (relating to registration
and practice of acupuncturists).
(2) Immoral conduct includes the following:
(i) Misrepresentation or concealment of a
material fact in obtaining a license to practice chiropractic or the
reinstatement thereof.
(ii) The
commission of an act involving moral turpitude, dishonesty or
corruption.
The provisions of this §5.81 issued under section
302 of the Chiropractic Practice Act (63 P. S. §
625.302); amended under sections 302(3),
506(a)(4) and (11) of the Chiropractic Practice Act (63 P. S. §§
625.302(3) and
625.506(a)(4) and
(11)).
This section cited in 49 Pa. Code §
5.95 (relating to
confidentiality-waived).