252-6 Wyo. Code R. §§ 6-3 - Unethical Conduct and Sexual Misconduct
Ethical conduct includes conforming to the minimal standards of acceptable and prevailing acupuncture practice. Conduct may be considered unethical regardless of whether or not actual injury to a patient occurred. Failure to comply with paragraphs (a) through (m) of this rule may be grounds for disciplinary action pursuant to W.S. 33-49-111.
(a) Representing to a patient that a manifestly
incurable condition of sickness, disease or injury can be cured;
(b) Obtaining any fee by fraud or
misrepresentation;
(c) Willfully or
negligently divulging a professional secret without the written consent of the
patient;
(d) Conviction of any
offense punishable by incarceration in a department of corrections institution or
in a federal prison. A copy of the record of conviction, certified to by the
clerk of the court entering the conviction, shall be conclusive evidence of the
conviction;
(e) Making statements
that the licensee knows, or with the exercise of reasonable care should know, are
false or misleading regarding skill or the efficacy or value of the medicine,
treatment or remedy prescribed or administered by the licensee or at the
direction of the licensee in the treatment of any disease or other condition of
the human body or mind;
(f)
Impersonating another licensee licensed under this chapter or permitting or
allowing any person to use the license;
(g) Gross negligence or repeated negligence in
the practice of acupuncture;
(h)
Incapacity to practice acupuncture regardless of whether the incapacity is caused
by illness or use of a controlled or non-controlled substance.
(A) The licensee shall have access to the
result of the examination and to the criteria used for grading and evaluating the
examination.
(B) If the examination
is given orally, the licensee shall have the right to have the examination
recorded;
(i) Failing to
report the change of the location of practice of the licensee;
(j) Making a fraudulent claim;
(k) Failure by the licensee to report to the
Board any adverse action taken against the licensee by another licensing
jurisdiction or any peer review body, health care institution, professional
society or association, governmental agency, law enforcement agency or court, for
acts or conduct similar to acts or conduct that would constitute grounds for
disciplinary action as described in this section;
(l) Failure by the licensee to notify the Board
of the licensee's voluntary resignation from the staff of a healthcare
institution or voluntary limitation of a licensee's staff privileges at the
institution if that action occurs while the licensee is under investigation by
the institution or a committee thereof for any reason related to medical
incompetence, unprofessional conduct, physical incapacity or
impairment;
(m) Committing sexual
misconduct. Sexual misconduct is defined on three levels: sexual impropriety,
transgression, or violation.
(i) Sexual
Impropriety: Lowest level of misconduct, non-physical contact of a patient that
is disrespectful in manner and sexually demeaning. Examples: inappropriate jokes,
crude gestures, demeaning comments;
(ii) Sexual Transgression: Inappropriate
touching of a patient stopping just short of an overt sexual act;
(iii) Sexual Violation: A sexual act between
patient and practitioner with no distinction between which party initiated the
contact or whether the act was consensual.
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.