22 Tex. Admin. Code § 108.57 - False, Misleading or Deceptive Advertising
(a) A
dentist has a duty to communicate truthfully. Professionals have a duty to be
honest and trustworthy in their dealings with people. The dentist's primary
obligations include respecting the position of trust inherent in the
dentist-patient relationship, communicating truthfully and without deception,
and maintaining intellectual integrity. In order to properly serve the public,
dentists should represent themselves in a manner that contributes to the esteem
of the profession. Dentists shall not misrepresent their training and
competence in any way that would be false or misleading in any material
respect. Dentists shall not advertise or solicit patients in any form of
communication in a manner that is false, misleading, deceptive, or not readily
subject to verification.
(b)
Published Communications. A dental health article, message or newsletter
published in print or electronic media under a dentist's byline to the public
must make truthful disclosure of the source and authorship of the publication.
If compensation was made for the published communication, a disclosure that the
communication is a paid advertisement shall be made. If the published
communication fails to make truthful disclosure of the source, authorship and
if compensation was made, that the communication is a paid advertisement, the
dentist is engaged in making a false or misleading representation to the public
in a material respect. If the published communication is designed to give rise
to questionable expectations for the purpose of inducing the public to utilize
the services of the sponsoring dentist, the dentist is engaged in making a
false or misleading representation to the public in a material respect.
(c) Examples. In addition to the
plain and ordinary meaning of the provision set forth throughout these
guidelines, additional examples of advertisements that may be false,
misleading, deceptive, or not readily subject to verification include but are
not limited to:
(1) making a material
misrepresentation of fact or omitting a fact necessary to make a statement as a
whole not materially misleading;
(2) intimidating or exerting undue pressure
or undue influence over a prospective patient;
(3) appealing to an individual's anxiety in
an excessive or unfair way;
(4)
claiming to provide or perform dental work without pain or discomfort to the
patient;
(5) implying or
suggesting superiority of materials or performance of professional services;
(6) comparing a health care
professional's services with another health care professional's services unless
the comparison can be factually substantiated;
(7) communicating an implication, prediction
or suggestion of any guarantee of future satisfaction or success of a dental
service or otherwise creating unjustified expectations concerning the potential
result of dental treatment. The communication of a guarantee to return a fee if
the patient is not satisfied with the treatment rendered is not considered
false, misleading deceptive or not readily subject to verification under this
rule;
(8) containing a testimonial
from a person who is not a patient of record or that includes false, misleading
or deceptive statements, or which is not readily subject to verification, or
which fails to include disclosures or warnings as to the identity and
credentials of the person making the testimonial;
(9) referring to benefits or other attributes
of dental procedures or products that involve significant risks without
including realistic assessments of the safety and efficacy of those procedures
or products;
(10) causing
confusion or misunderstanding as to the credentials, education, or licensing of
a health care professional;
(11)
representing in the use of a professional name a title or professional
identification that is expressly or commonly reserved to or used by another
profession or professional;
(12)
failing to make truthful disclosure of the source and authorship of any message
published under a dentist's byline;
(13) communicating an implication or
suggestion that a service is free or discounted when the fee is built in to a
companion procedure provided to the patient and charged to the patient; and
(14) communicating statistical
data, representations, or other information that is not subject to reasonable
verification by the public.
(d) Photographs or other representations may
be used in advertising of actual patients of record of the licensee. Written
patient consent must be obtained prior to the communication of facts, data, or
information which may identify the patient. The advertising must include
language stating "Actual results may vary."
(e) Advertising or promotion of products from
which the dentist receives a direct remuneration or incentive is prohibited
unless the dentist fully and clearly discloses that he is a paid spokesman for
the product, or the dentist fully and clearly discloses that he is the inventor
or manufacturer of the product.
(f)
Any and all advertisements are presumed to have been approved by the licensee
named therein.
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.