Kan. Admin. Regs. § 102-4-12 - Unprofessional conduct
(a) Any license
may be suspended, limited, conditioned, qualified, restricted, revoked, not
issued, or not renewed upon a finding of that unprofessional conduct has
occurred.
(b) Any of the following
acts by a licensed master's level psychologist, a licensed clinical
psychotherapist, or an applicant for licensure at the master's level of
psychology shall constitute unprofessional conduct:
(1) Obtaining or attempting to obtain a
license or registration for oneself or another by means of fraud, bribery,
deceit, misrepresentation, or concealment of a material fact;
(2) except when such information has been
obtained in the context of confidentiality, failing to notify the board, within
a reasonable period of time, that any person regulated by the board or applying
for a license or registration, including oneself, has met any of the following
conditions:
(A) Had a professional license,
certificate, permit, registration, certification, or professional membership
granted by any jurisdiction, professional association, or professional
organization that has been limited, conditioned, qualified, restricted,
suspended, revoked, refused, voluntarily surrendered, or allowed to expire in
lieu of or during investigatory or disciplinary proceedings;
(B) has been subject to any other
disciplinary action by any credentialing board, professional association, or
professional organization;
(C) has
been demoted, terminated, suspended, reassigned, or asked to resign from
employment, or has resigned from employment, for some form of misfeasance,
malfeasance, or nonfeasance;
(D)
has been convicted of a crime; or
(E) has practiced the licensee's or
registrant's profession in violation of the laws or regulations regulating the
profession;
(3)
knowingly allowing another person to use one's license or registration;
(4) impersonating another person
holding a license or registration issued by this or any other board;
(5) having been convicted of a crime
resulting from or relating to the licensee's practice of master's level
psychology;
(6) furthering the
licensure or registration application of another person who is known or
reasonably believed to be unqualified with respect to character, education, or
other relevant eligibility requirements;
(7) knowingly aiding or abetting anyone who
is not credentialed by the board to represent that individual as a person who
is credentialed by the board;
(8)
failing to recognize, seek intervention, and otherwise appropriately respond
when one's own personal problems, psychosocial distress, or mental health
difficulties interfere with or negatively impact professional judgment,
professional performance and functioning, or the ability to act in the client's
best interests;
(9) failing or
refusing to cooperate in a timely manner with any request from the board for a
response, information, or assistance with respect to the board's investigation
of any report of an alleged violation filed against oneself or any other
applicant or professional who is required to be licensed or registered by the
board. Any person taking longer than 30 days to provide the requested response,
information, or assistance shall have the burden of demonstrating that the
person has acted in a timely manner;
(10) offering to perform or performing
services clearly inconsistent or incommensurate with one's training, education,
or experience or with accepted professional standards;
(11) treating any client, student, or
supervisee in a cruel manner;
(12)
discriminating against any client, student, or supervisee on the basis of
color, race, gender, religion, national origin, or disability;
(13) failing to advise and explain to each
client the respective rights, responsibilities, and duties involved in the
professional relationship;
(14)
failing to provide each client with a description of what the client can expect
in the way of services, consultation, reports, fees, billing, therapeutic
regimen, or schedule, or failing to reasonably comply with the description;
(15) failing to provide each
client with a description of the possible effects of the proposed treatment
when the treatment is experimental or when there are clear and known risks to
the client;
(16) failing to inform
each client, supervisee, or student of any financial interests that might
accrue to the master's level psychologist or clinical psychotherapist from
referral to any other service or from the use of any tests, books, or
apparatus;
(17) failing to inform
each client that the client is entitled to the same services from a public
agency if one is employed by that public agency and also offers services
privately;
(18) failing to provide
each client or the client's legal representative with access to the client's
records following the receipt of a formal written request, unless the release
of this information is restricted or exempted by law, or when the disclosure of
this information is precluded for a sufficiently compelling reason;
(19) failing to inform each client,
supervisee, or student of the limits of client confidentiality, the purposes
for which the information is obtained, and the manner in which the information
may be used;
(20) revealing
information, a confidence, or secret of any client, or failing to protect the
confidences, secrets, or information contained in a client's records, except
when at least one of these conditions is met:
(A) Disclosure is required or permitted by
law;
(B) failure to disclose the
information presents a clear and present danger to the health or safety of an
individual or the public; or
(C)
the master's level psychologist or clinical psychotherapist is a party to a
civil, criminal, or disciplinary investigation or action arising from the
practice of psychology, in which case disclosure is limited to that action;
(21) failing to obtain
written, informed consent from each client, or the client's legal
representative or representatives, before performing any of the following
actions:
(A) Electronically recording
sessions with that client;
(B)
permitting a third-party observation of their activities; or
(C) releasing information concerning a client
to a third person, except as required or permitted by law;
(22) failing to protect the
confidences of, secrets of, or information concerning other persons when
providing a client with access to that client's records;
(23) failing to exercise due diligence in
protecting the information regarding and the confidences and secrets of the
client from disclosure by other persons in one's work or practice setting;
(24) engaging in professional
activities, including billing practices and advertising, involving dishonesty,
fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation;
(25) using alcohol or illegally using any
controlled substance while performing the duties or services of a master's
level psychologist or clinical psychotherapist;
(26) making sexual advances toward or
engaging in physical intimacies or sexual activities with one's client,
supervisee, or student;
(27)
making sexual advances toward, engaging in physical intimacies or sexual
activities with, or exercising undue influence over any person who, within the
past 24 months, has been one's client;
(28) exercising undue influence over any
client, supervisee, or student, including promoting sales of services or goods,
in a manner that will exploit the client, student, or supervisee for the
financial gain, personal gratification, or advantage of oneself or a third
party;
(29) directly or indirectly
offering or giving to a third party or soliciting, receiving, or agreeing to
receive from a third party any fee or other consideration for the referral of
the client or in connection with the performance of psychological or other
professional services;
(30)
directly receiving or agreeing to receive a fee or any other consideration from
a client or from any third party for or in connection with the performance of
psychological services, other than from an authorized employer in an employment
situation as specified in this act;
(31) soliciting or assuming professional
responsibility for clients of another agency or colleague without attempting to
coordinate continuity of client services with that agency or colleague;
(32) making claims of professional
superiority that one cannot substantiate;
(33) guaranteeing that satisfaction or a cure
will result from the performance of psychological services;
(34) claiming or using any secret or special
method of treatment or techniques that one refuses to disclose to the board;
(35) continuing or ordering tests,
procedures, or treatments or using treatment facilities or services not
warranted by the condition, best interests, or preferences of the client;
(36) failing to maintain a record
for each client that conforms to the following minimal requirements:
(A) Contains adequate identification of the
client;
(B) indicates the client's
initial reason for seeking the master's level psychologist's or clinical
psychotherapist's services;
(C)
contains pertinent and significant information concerning the client's
condition;
(D) summarizes the
intervention, treatment, tests, procedures, and services that were obtained,
performed, ordered, or recommended and the findings and results of each;
(E) documents the client's
progress during the course of intervention or treatment provided by the
master's level psychologist or clinical psychotherapist;
(F) is legible;
(G) contains only those terms and
abbreviations that are comprehensible to similar professional practitioners;
(H) indicates the date and nature
of any professional service that was provided; and
(I) describes the manner and process by which
the professional relationship terminated;
(37) taking credit for work not personally
performed, whether by giving inaccurate or misleading information or by failing
to disclose accurate or material information;
(38) if engaged in research, failing to
fulfill these requirements:
(A) Consider
carefully the possible consequences for human beings participating in the
research;
(B) protect each
participant from unwarranted physical and mental harm;
(C) ascertain that the consent of each
participant is voluntary and informed; and
(D) preserve the privacy and protect the
anonymity of each subject of the research within the terms of informed consent;
(39) making or filing a
report that one knows to be false, distorted, erroneous, incomplete, or
misleading;
(40) failing to notify
the client promptly when termination or interruption of service to the client
is anticipated;
(41) failing to
seek continuation of service, or abandoning or neglecting a client under or in
need of professional care, without making reasonable arrangements for that
care;
(42) abandoning employment
under circumstances that seriously impair the delivery of professional care to
clients and without providing reasonable notice to the employer;
(43) failing to terminate the master's level
psychology or clinical psychotherapy services when it is apparent that the
relationship no longer serves the client's needs or best interests;
(44) if the master's level psychologist or
clinical psychotherapist is the owner or custodian of client records, failing
to retain those records for at least two years after the date of termination of
the professional relationship, unless otherwise provided by law;
(45) supervising in a negligent manner anyone
for whom one has supervisory responsibility;
(46) failing to inform a client if master's
level psychology or clinical psychotherapy services are provided or delivered
under supervision;
(47) engaging
in a dual relationship with a client, student, or supervisee;
(48) failing to inform the proper authorities
as required by
K.S.A. 38-2223, and amendments thereto, that one
knows or has reason to believe that a client has been involved in harming or
has harmed a child, whether by physical, mental, or emotional abuse or neglect
or by sexual abuse;
(49) failing
to inform the proper authorities as required by
K.S.A. 39-1402, and amendments thereto, that one
knows or has reason to believe that any of the following circumstances apply to
a resident, as defined by
K.S.A. 39-1401(a) and amendments
thereto:
(A) Has been or is being abused,
neglected, or exploited;
(B) is in
a condition that is the result of abuse, neglect, or exploitation; or
(C) is in need of protective
services;
(50) failing
to inform the proper authorities as required by
K.S.A. 39-1431, and amendments thereto, that one
knows or has reason to believe that any of the following circumstances apply to
an adult, as defined in
K.S.A. 39-1430 and amendments thereto:
(A) Is being or has been abused, neglected,
or exploited;
(B) is in a
condition that is the result of abuse, neglect, or exploitation; or
(C) is in need of protective services;
(51) intentionally or
negligently failing to file a report or record required by state or federal
law, willfully impeding or obstructing the filing of a report or record
required by state or federal law, or inducing another person to take any of
those actions;
(52) offering to
perform or performing any service, procedure, or therapy that, by the accepted
standards of professional practice in the community, would constitute
experimentation on human subjects without first obtaining the full, informed,
and voluntary written consent of the client or the client's legal
representative or representatives;
(53) practicing master's level psychology or
clinical psychotherapy in an incompetent manner;
(54) practicing as a master's level
psychologist or clinical psychotherapist after one's license expires;
(55) using without a license, or
continuing to use after the expiration of a license, any title or abbreviation
prescribed by law for use solely by persons currently holding that type or
class of license;
(56) offering to
provide or providing services in an employment situation other than that which
is permitted by
K.S.A. 74-5362, and amendments thereto, as an
independent, contract, or private provider of psychological services;
(57) practicing without adequate
direction from a person authorized in
K.S.A. 74-5362 and amendments thereto; and
(58) violating any provision of
this act or any regulation adopted under the act.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.