Sorry for the delay in posting this from the April 10th and 11th Meeting. I have been very busy.
April Board Committee Meetings
Executive Committee
New Executive Session Procedure
According to Mr. Simpson the Attorney General provision which they had been announcing before going into executive session has been over ruled. Therefore, a new system had to be developed. From now on when moving into Executive Session, a board member must make a motion to move into executive session for one of four possible reasons:
Licensure
Disciplinary
Advice of Counsel
Personnel Matters
After the motion is passed the Executive Session begins and public observers must leave the room. Executive Session will also no longer be listed as an agenda item, because the Board can go in whenever they feel it is appropriate. At least now public observers can know on a basic level why the Executive Session has been called. Other than the changes discussed above, nothing else has been modified concerning the Board’s ability to go into Executive Session.
Dr. Patrick Retiring
After nearly 7 years, and upon turning 70, Dr. Patrick will be retiring from his position as Executive Director for the Texas Medical Board on August 28, 2008. He plans to go on and take a masters degree in music at the University of Texas .
Standing Orders Committee
Requests for Waivers of Prescriptive Delegation Requirements
Two specific requests to waive prescriptive delegation requirements were discussed in depth. A request from the Kay Health Center was denied, and another request from a Dr. Theriot was postponed so that further information could be acquired. Staff informed the members of the committee on previous Board rulings concerning these waivers. The Board has never granted a complete waiver before, but in special circumstances usually involving underserved areas, they have reduced the frequency of visits required.
Rule Review
Chapter 169- Authority of Physicians to supply Drugs
Name updated, nothing substantive.
Chapter 193- Standing Delegation Orders
193.2, 193.2- Name updated
193.4- Fixed a double negative
193.6- For underserved populations, physician must be present at least every 10 business days no matter how many days the office itself is actually open. Chart review must consist of charts since the most recent visit.
193.11- Deleted
Disciplinary Process Review Committee
Report on Investigation
Mari Robinson reported on the Investigation department to the Board. Apparently in February staff “hit a wall”, and “stopped processing anything in a meaningful way”. At that time there were 1,894 cases open with only 19 investigators. So many cases and documents were pouring in that these investigators were unable to make much progress. Only 80 cases were closed in February.
In order to get the ball rolling again, staff has been reallocated to the Investigation department and someone has been hired part time to focus on case closures. Staff has also predicted that the new Fast Track system will reduce the amount of cases moving through the Investigation department by 10-15%.
This month 279 cases have been closed, slightly more than were opened, and they have only 1,865 open cases. In order for the current staff to operate efficiently there should only be around 1,500 open cases. Investigators should have about 50-55 cases each but currently have 95. If these numbers continue, the Board will be asking the legislature for more staff.
Rule Review
Chapter 182- Use of Experts
Experts will be matched to cases in the specialty they have declared.
Administrative Agreed Order Modifications
It is the current practice to require an ISC for any modification of an Agreed Order. Some of these modifications however could be considered administrative. For example, a licensee under order may be required to visit a psychologist. If that psychologist retires, under current rules the licensee would be required to go to an ISC to see a different psychologist.
Staff proposed that these administrative kinds of Agreed Order modifications could be screened out and decided by staff members. Then they would be presented to the Board at the meetings for approval, much like the Fast Track system. Decreasing the amount of cases going to ISC will allow the Board to set them up faster and more efficiently. This should also help out with the backlog in the Investigation department.