22 Tex. Admin. Code § 221.2 - APRN Titles and Abbreviations
(a)
An advanced practice registered nurse (APRN) must be licensed in one or more of
the following roles and population focus areas:
(1) Roles:
(A) Certified Nurse-Midwife (CNM);
(B) Certified Nurse Practitioner
(CNP);
(C) Certified Registered
Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA); and/or
(D) Clinical Nurse Specialist
(CNS);
(2) Population
focus areas:
(A) Adult-gerontology:
(i) Acute care; and/or
(ii) Primary care;
(B) Family/individual across the
lifespan;
(C) Neonatal;
(D) Pediatrics:
(i) Acute care; and/or
(ii) Primary care;
(E) Psychiatric/mental health;
and/or
(F) Women's
health/gender-related.
(b) A registered nurse who holds current
licensure issued by the Board as an APRN shall, at a minimum, use the
designation "APRN" and the APRN licensure title, which consists of the current
role and population focus area, granted by the Board.
(c) When providing care to patients, the APRN
shall wear and provide clear identification that includes the current APRN
designation and licensure title being utilized by the APRN, as specified by
this section. An APRN may also include additional certifications or educational
credentials in his/her identification, so long as the certifications and/or
credentials are current, accurate, and not misleading as to their
meaning.
(d) Unless licensed as an
APRN by the Board as provided in this chapter, an individual shall not:
(1) claim to be an APRN or hold
himself/herself out to be an APRN in this state; and/or
(2) use a title or any other designation
tending to imply that the person is an APRN.
(e) An individual who violates subsection (c)
or (d) of this section may be subject to discipline under the Nursing Practice
Act and Board rules.
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.