The North Carolina
Society of Anesthesiologists (NCSA) won a significant legal victory for
"physician supervision" from the N.C. Court of Appeals this week.On Tuesday, March
15th, the three judge Court of Appeals panel hearing the Board of
Nursing's ("BON") appeal in the “physician supervision” litigation released a
unanimous
decision in favor of the NCSA, N.C. Medical Society (NCMS) and the
N.C. Medical Board.
The ruling rejected the appeal by the BON in its litigation to
overturn the requirement of physician supervision in the Medical Board's
office-based surgery guidelines.
In
its ruling the Court clearly and specifically stated that the 1994
Consent Order between the BON, NCSA, NCMS and Medical Board cannot be
construed as acquiescence by the NCSA, NCMS and Medical Board to a
standard of collaboration, rather than supervision. "We cannot agree with [the Board of Nursing's]
assertion that the affidavits compel a conclusion that the Medical
Board abandoned the standard of care - supervision of medical acts
performed by nurse anesthetists."
"[E]ven assuming the 1994 consent order could be read as
evidencing an intent by the Medical Board to acquiesce in a
collaboration standard, the medical board cannot be forbidden from
advising its licensees on the standard of medical practice in order to
protect the public interest."
Most
importantly, the Court ruling contained a strong statement that
physician supervision is the law in North Carolina.
"Physician supervision of nurse anesthetists providing
anesthesia care, when that care includes prescribing medical treatment
regimens and making medical diagnoses, is a fundamental patient safety
standard required by North Carolina law." This
is the first time a North Carolina appellate court has ruled on the
issue of physician supervision of nurse anesthetists.
As noted by the Court, the opinion reaches essentially the same
conclusion on the requirement of physician supervision as the 1998
Attorney General's Opinion from then-Attorney General Mike Easley.
The decision did not determine precisely what nursing
procedures must be completed under physician supervision because that
issue was not before the Court. Determining
this issue is best left to the Medical Board.
The decision, however, should end arguments from the Board of
Nursing that
N.C. nurse anesthetists are not required to be supervised by
physicians.