Your Soup Served Fresh

Tweet Subscribe to receive your daily serving of Capital Soup. Tweet

News. Views. Unfiltered.

Tweet Submit your news and opinions to Capital Soup free of charge. Tweet

Advertise in the Soup.

Tweet For rates and availability, contact ads@capitalsoup.com. Tweet

Dish it Up.

Tweet Order special services or featured positioning at services@capitalsoup.com. Tweet

Home » Education » Currently Reading:

“Doctor” Title Bill Opposed by State’s Largest Nursing Organization

February 8, 2013 Government No Comments

Contact: Jeanie Demshar
407-896-3261
jdemshar@floridanurse.org

“DOCTOR” TITLE BILL OPPOSED BY STATE’S LARGEST NURSING ORGANIZATION
Legislation is “sophomoric,” distracts from key health care decisions at Capitol

TALLAHASSEE (Fla) -The state’s largest organization representing registered nurses today condemned legislation that forces nurses with doctorate degrees to explain to patients and the public that they are “not medical doctors” or face felony charges.

SB 612 would require nurses who have attained their doctoral degrees and use the title of “Doctor” to state, in advertising or rendering care, that they are not medical doctors or osteopathic physicians. “Offenders” could face criminal charges of a third-degree felony, which is the same punishment for certain burglaries, neglect of an elderly or disabled adult, and animal cruelty resulting in death.

“At best, this bill is sophomoric and serves to distract legislators from important discussions about the future of Florida’s health care,” said Dr. Mavra Kear, Ph.D., ARNP, President of the Florida Nurses Association, who is neither a medical doctor nor an osteopathic physician.

The legislation comes as lawmakers wrestle with statewide implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the expansion of Medicaid to more Floridians and the development of online insurance marketplaces – all of which will drive up the demand for primary care services.

“There is a demonstrated physician shortage in Florida, and nurse practitioners have the education and experience to step in and help their physician partners provide basic health care services,” said FNA Executive Director, Willa Fuller, RN, who is seeking her doctorate but is neither a medical doctor nor an osteopathic physician. “Instead, certain physicians choose to focus their energy on a problem that simply doesn’t exist.”

State law already makes it a crime for individuals who lead the public to believe that one is a medical doctor or engaged in the licensed practice of medicine without holding a valid, active license. The penalty for this offense, however, is only a first-degree misdemeanor.

All health care practitioners face disciplinary hearings from their professional board at the Department of Health if they fail to identify themselves to the patient — orally or in writing, such as a name badge — by the type of license the practitioner has.

SB 612 is sponsored by Sen. Bill Galvano (R-Bradenton). The House version is expected to be filed by Rep. Heather Fitzenhagen (R-Fort Myers).

For over 100 years, Florida Nurses Association has been the voice of nursing in the state of Florida representing the interests of both caregivers and administrators in all aspects of nursing and in various arenas. The FNA mission is to serve and support all registered nurses through professional development, advocacy, and the promotion of excellence at every level of professional nursing practice. For more information on FNA, please visit www.floridanurse.org.
# # #

SunDeck: What’s A-Twitter in FL Politics

AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement

ADVERTISEMENTS

Sachs Media Group

Florida Sports Fan

Archives

2013 Florida Capitol Press Corps Guide

2013 Florida Capitol Press Corps Guide

Sachs Media Group this week released its annual Capitol Press Corps Guide, the resource to find and connect with reporters who cover Florida from the capital city. The pocket-sized 2013 guide is a listing of all major news outlets in Florida that have capital bureaus, including contact information for individual reporters who cover issues of statewide importance. The 2013 guide includes reporters’ Twitter handles, recognizing the growing importance of social media in reporting. Supplies are limited. To request a hard copy, email herbie@sachsmedia.com.

Florida NewsMakers

Opinion

For National Trauma Awareness Month Let’s Agree: All Floridians Deserve Access to Trauma Care

May 21, 2013

Tweet For National Trauma Awareness Month Let’s Agree: All Floridians Deserve Access to Trauma Care By Dr. James M. Hurst May is National Trauma Awareness month, and it finds Florida trying to write a prescription for improving access to trauma care for everyone. As an expert in the field of trauma, I was somewhat encouraged [...]

Rep. Janet Cruz: The News from Cruz

May 14, 2013

Tweet 2013 Session Highlights By Rep. Janet Cruz As I return to District 62 from the 2013 legislative session I wanted to fill you in on some of the issues that we have been working on the past two months that might be of interest to you. Elections Perhaps one of the biggest issues this [...]

Rep. Janet Adkins: Letter to the Editor, May 13, 2013

May 13, 2013

Tweet Letter to the Editor May 13, 2013 Session, Week 9 By Rep. Janet Adkins The final week of the 115th legislative session, since Florida’s statehood in 1845, began with the pre-dawn drive to Tallahassee on Monday morning. The weekend at home with Fernandina Beach’s Shrimp Festival Parade and Jacksonville Beach’s Opening of the Beaches [...]