Wyoming Administrative Code
Agency 056 - Optometry, Board of Examiners in
Sub-Agency 0001 - Optometry, Board of Examiners in
Chapter 7 - GROUNDS FOR DISCIPLINE
Section 7-2 - Grounds for Disciplinary Action
Universal Citation: WY Code of Rules 7-2
Current through September 21, 2024
The Board may take disciplinary action or refuse to issue or renew a license for one (1) or more of the following acts or conduct:
(a) A violation of the Act or Board Rules, including:
(i) Denial of a license to practice
optometry, or any disciplinary action against a licensee, by any other state,
territory, or country;
(ii) Failing
to report to the Board known or suspected violations of the laws and
regulations governing the practice of optometry in Wyoming;
(iii) Submitting false information to the
Board;
(iv) Failing to notify the
Board of a malpractice final judgment or settlement within thirty
days;
(v) Aiding or abetting the
practice of optometry in Wyoming by any person not licensed to practice in
Wyoming;
(vi) Fraudulent
billing;
(vii) Using any term other
than "optometrist" or "Doctor of Optometry" to reflect licensure; or
(viii) Loaning of a license issued by the
Board.
(b) A conviction involving moral turpitude, including:
(i) A
felony or misdemeanor involving a patient or adversely relating to the practice
of optometry. A plea of nolo contendere shall be considered a
conviction;
(ii) Violating
professional boundaries by soliciting, encouraging, threatening, forcing, or
engaging in any sexual act or relationship with or upon a patient, regardless
of consent. A consensual sexual relationship shall not be deemed moral
turpitude if the optometrist-patient relationship was terminated prior to the
relationship;
(iii) Sexual
harassment of a patient or staff member;
(c) Habitual intemperance or being habitually addicted includes the use of any drug, narcotic, chemical, alcohol or mind altering material that renders the licensee unfit or incompetent to:
(i) Practice optometry with reasonable skill
and safety to patients; or
(ii)
Conform to essential standards of acceptable optometry practice, in which case
actual injury need not be established.
(d) Incompetence, malpractice, or unethical conduct includes:
(i) Practicing in a manner
that is not in the best interest of the public and endangers public health,
safety, and welfare;
(ii)
Practicing optometry:
(A) In violation of any
limitations or restrictions imposed on a license, or practicing optometry while
a license is suspended or has expired;
(B) With a mental or physical impairment
which renders the licensee incapable of practicing optometry with reasonable
skill and safety; or
(iii) Performing any procedure in the course
of a patient's care, which:
(A) Is beyond the
licensee's training and competence;
(B) Deviates from the customary and accepted
standard of care in the profession;
(iv) Failing to:
(A) Advise a patient to seek the attention of
a physician or other health care provider for an eye disease or disorder
discovered during an examination which, in the opinion of the licensee,
requires additional diagnosis and medical treatment. Such advice shall not be
required for any previously diagnosed disease or disorder;
(B) Provide patients with accurate and
complete information regarding the extent and nature of services available to
them;
(C) Maintain confidentiality
of all information obtained in the course of the optometrist-patient
relationship, except that disclosure of confidential information is permissible
with the expressed written consent of the patient, or as required by
law;
(D) Maintain the
confidentiality of any examination related to obtaining a license to practice
optometry;
(E) Ensure that a
patient's welfare is not compromised in any experimentation or research
involving that patient;
(F) Obtain
informed written consent from the patient for any experimentation or
research;
(G) Obtain approval from
any regulatory entity, in which approval is customarily or lawfully required,
in order to conduct experimentation or research;
(H) Comply with any regulatory standards
customarily or lawfully required for the continuation of experimentation or
research;
(I) Release a spectacle
lens prescription to the patient in accordance with federal law;
(J) Release a contact lens prescription to
the patient in accordance with federal law without all of the following
information: expiration date, wearing schedule, care regimen, and all necessary
parameters essential to fabricating a contact lens;
(v) Billing patients for services provided
which are not justified and are not necessary for diagnostic or therapeutic
purposes;
(vi) Administering,
dispensing, or prescribing any controlled substance other than in the course of
legitimate professional practice as authorized by law;
(vii) Knowingly making any false or
fraudulent statement, written or oral, in connection with the practice of
optometry, including falsifying entries on patient records;
(viii) Representing that a non-correctable
condition can be permanently corrected;
(ix) Interfering with the free choice of any
patient when selecting a physician or other health care practitioner;
and
(x) Incurring any judgment
against the licensee for malpractice or negligence.
(e) Unprofessional and dishonest conduct includes:
(i) Advertising professional
services through statements that are untruthful, improbable, misleading, or
impossible;
(ii) Announcing
services available in the licensee's practice that expresses or implies
specialization;
(iii) Failing to
display a license at all times in a conspicuous and readily accessible location
to all patients at the optometrist's place of business;
(iv) Failure to comply with a term, condition
or obligation of a Board order; or
(v) Failure to appropriately
supervise.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Wyoming may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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