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Bill > SF467
IA SF467
A bill for an act relating to the licensure of anesthesiologist assistants, and making penalties applicable.
summary
Introduced
02/27/2025
02/27/2025
In Committee
02/27/2025
02/27/2025
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
Introduced Session
91st General Assembly
Bill Summary
This bill creates the licensed profession of anesthesiology assisting under the authority of the board of medicine (board). The bill allows an anesthesiologist, defined in the bill as a physician and surgeon or osteopathic physician and surgeon who is trained in the administration of anesthesia, to delegate certain duties, listed in the bill, to an anesthesiologist assistant who is licensed by the board and supervised by the anesthesiologist. The bill includes definitions for both “assist” and “supervision”. The bill requires the board to license a person as an anesthesiologist assistant if the person graduates from an accredited anesthesiologist assistant program, completes an appropriate certification examination, submits an application on a form prescribed by the board, and pays an application fee in an amount determined by the board by rule. An anesthesiologist assistant shall be valid for two years and may be renewed. The bill also requires the board to issue a temporary license to a person who successfully completes an accredited anesthesiologist assistant training program, certifies that person intends to take the next available certification examination after the receipt of the temporary license, submits an application in a form prescribed by the board, and pays an application fee in an amount determined by the board by rule. A temporary license shall not be issued for a term of more than one year and is not eligible for renewal. The bill allows the board to revoke, suspend, restrict, or refuse to renew an anesthesiologist assistant license if the board determines that a licensee has violated a provision of the bill or rules adopted by the board. The bill also allows a board to reinstate a revoked license if the board makes certain determinations regarding the former licensee’s fitness to practice anesthesiologist assisting and the former licensee applies for reinstatement. The bill prohibits a former licensee from applying for reinstatement less than two years from the date the license is revoked, except that a person whose license was revoked due to a conviction for a crime that was later reversed on repeal may apply for reinstatement immediately upon the entry of reversal by the court. The bill allows an anesthesiologist assistant to perform only those duties delegated to the anesthesiologist assistant by the supervising anesthesiologist that are within the education and training of the anesthesiologist assistant. The bill requires a supervising anesthesiologist to be immediately available to the anesthesiologist assistant such that the supervising anesthesiologist is available to intervene if needed. The bill does not prohibit an anesthesiologist assistant from having access to and obtaining prescription drugs as directed by a supervising anesthesiologist. The bill prohibits a person who is not licensed as provided in the bill from using the title “anesthesiologist assistant”, using the initials “A.A.” or “C.A.A.”, or otherwise representing that the person is an anesthesiologist assistant. The bill also prohibits a person from practicing anesthesiology assisting without a license issued pursuant to the bill unless the person is licensed to practice a health profession and the performance of anesthesiology assisting is within the scope of practice of the person’s license. A person who violates either of these provisions is guilty of a serious misdemeanor. A serious misdemeanor is punishable by confinement for no more than one year and a fine of at least $430 but not more than $2,560.
AI Summary
This bill establishes a new professional licensing category for anesthesiologist assistants (AAs) under the authority of the board of medicine. The bill defines an anesthesiologist assistant as a licensed professional who assists an anesthesiologist in medical practice, with specific requirements for education, certification, and professional conduct. To become licensed, an individual must graduate from an accredited anesthesiologist assistant program, pass a certification examination, submit an application, and pay a fee. The license is valid for two years and renewable, with provisions for a temporary one-year license for new graduates. The bill outlines extensive details about the scope of practice for AAs, including specific medical tasks they can perform under the direct supervision of an anesthesiologist, such as developing anesthesia care plans, obtaining patient histories, performing medical procedures, administering medications, and managing patient care before, during, and after medical procedures. The bill also establishes penalties for unauthorized practice, making it a serious misdemeanor for individuals to practice as or represent themselves as an anesthesiologist assistant without proper licensing. Importantly, the bill requires that an AA can only perform duties delegated by a supervising anesthesiologist and must work within their education and training boundaries, with the supervising anesthesiologist immediately available to intervene if needed.
Committee Categories
Government Affairs
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
Subcommittee: Rozenboom, Blake, and Schultz. S.J. 405. (on 03/04/2025)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
Document Type | Source Location |
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State Bill Page | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/legislation/BillBook?ga=91&ba=SF467 |
BillText | https://www.legis.iowa.gov/docs/publications/LGI/91/attachments/SF467.html |
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