N.J. Admin. Code § 13:35-12.20 - Sexual misconduct
(a) A licensee
shall not engage in sexual contact with a client during the course of
electrology treatment. "Sexual contact" means the knowing touching of a
person's body directly or through clothing, where the circumstances surrounding
the touching would be construed by a reasonable person to be motivated by the
licensee's own prurient interest or for sexual arousal or gratification.
"Sexual contact" includes, but is not limited to, the imposition of a part of
the licensee's body upon the part of the client's body, sexual penetration, or
the insertion or any imposition of any object of any part of a licensee's or
client's body into or near the genital, anal or other opening of the other
person's body. "Sexual contact" does not include the touching of a client's
body which is necessary during a generally accepted and recognized electrology
procedure.
(b) A licensee shall not
engage in any discussion of an intimate sexual nature with a client during the
course of treatment unless that discussion is directly related to a proper
electrology purpose. Such discussion shall not include disclosure by the
licensee of his or her own sexual relationships.
(c) A licensee shall provide privacy and
examination conditions which prevent the exposure of the unclothed body of the
client. Appropriate draping measures shall be employed to protect the client's
privacy.
(d) A licensee shall not
engage in sexual harassment during the course of electrology treatment. "Sexual
harassment" means solicitation of any sexual act, physical advances, or verbal
or non-verbal contact that is sexual in nature, and which occurs in connection
with a licensee's activities or role as a provider of electrology services, and
that either: is unwelcome, offensive to a reasonable person, or creates a
hostile workplace environment, and the licensee knows, should know, or is told
this; or is sufficiently severe or intense to be abusive to a reasonable person
in that context.
(e) A licensee
shall not engage in any other activity during the course of treatment which
would lead a reasonable person to believe that the activity serves the
licensee's personal prurient interests or which is for the sexual arousal, or
sexual gratification of the licensee or client or which is construed as an act
of sexual abuse.
(f) Violation of
any of the prohibitions or directives set forth in (a) through (e) above shall
constitute professional misconduct pursuant to
N.J.S.A.
45:1-21(e).
(g) It shall not be a defense to any action
under this section that the client solicited or consented to sexual contact
with the licensee.
Notes
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