An Act Regarding Health Care Providers and Patient Trust
Sec. 1. 32 MRSA §2112 is enacted to read:
§ 2112. Medical standards; prohibition on government intervention
(1) Verified or supported by the weight of peer-reviewed medical research conducted in compliance with accepted scientific methods;
(2) Recognized as correct and objective by leading medical organizations with relevant expertise; or
(3) Recommended by or affirmed in the medical practice guidelines of a nationally recognized accrediting organization.
(1) Information that is not medically accurate or medically appropriate for the patient; or
(2) A medical service that is not evidence-based and appropriate for the patient; or
(1) Information that is medically accurate and medically appropriate for the patient; or
(2) A medical service that is evidence-based and appropriate for the patient.
Sec. 2. 32 MRSA §2600-D is enacted to read:
§ 2600-D. Medical standards; prohibition on government intervention
(1) Verified or supported by the weight of peer-reviewed medical research conducted in compliance with accepted scientific methods;
(2) Recognized as correct and objective by leading medical organizations with relevant expertise; or
(3) Recommended by or affirmed in the medical practice guidelines of a nationally recognized accrediting organization.
(1) Information that is not medically accurate or medically appropriate for the patient; or
(2) A medical service that is not evidence-based and appropriate for the patient; or
(1) Information that is medically accurate and medically appropriate for the patient; or
(2) A medical service that is evidence-based and appropriate for the patient.
Sec. 3. 32 MRSA §3300-G is enacted to read:
§ 3300-G. Medical standards; prohibition on government intervention
(1) Verified or supported by the weight of peer-reviewed medical research conducted in compliance with accepted scientific methods;
(2) Recognized as correct and objective by leading medical organizations with relevant expertise; or
(3) Recommended by or affirmed in the medical practice guidelines of a nationally recognized accrediting organization.
(1) Information that is not medically accurate or medically appropriate for the patient; or
(2) A medical service that is not evidence-based and appropriate for the patient; or
(1) Information that is medically accurate and medically appropriate for the patient; or
(2) A medical service that is evidence-based and appropriate for the patient.
SUMMARY
This bill prevents the State from requiring persons licensed by the Board of Osteopathic Licensure or the Board of Licensure in Medicine, including physician assistants, or the State Board of Nursing to give patients information that is medically inaccurate or perform medical services that are inconsistent with evidence-based standards. It also provides that the State may not prohibit a person licensed under these professional boards from providing patients with medically accurate information or evidence-based medical services.