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Page: Working Within the Scope of Practice

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Medical Assistant Scope of Practice

Laws for Medical Assistants 

All medical assistants, regardless of the amount of education, training, experience, must realize that they are subject to certain laws and limitations within their scope of practice.
 

Act Within the Scope of Practice

"An act is within the scope of employment if it is incidental to the employer's business and is done to further the employer's interest. If an employee departs so far from his duties that his acts are no longer for his employer's benefit, then his acts are not within the scope of his employment. However, if the tortuous act of the employee arose out of an activity which was within the employee's scope of employment or within the ordinary course of business, then that act may be considered to be within the scope of employment."

Performed under the direct supervision of the medical doctor or other licensed health care provider the medical assistant can:

 

Limitations

images/240ab4db0.jpgAll medical assistants must adhere to Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996. 

Some states require that medical assistants who draw blood to pass a practical examination in phlebotomy, and to be certified.
 
Some states require medical assistants to have a special license from their state to expose patients to X-rays.
 
Other states mandate special training before medical assistants can administer certain types of needle injections, or tests such as allergy testing, or PPD/Mantoux skin tests.
 
 

American Medical Technologists (AMT) maintains a list of the RMA Lawful Scope of Practice - PDF - Published in AMT Events March 2003 - and a MA Task List that includes various tasks that medical assistants may perform.

 

Disclaimer:
The above is not an exclusive itemization of the technical supportive services a medical assistant can or cannot perform. Medical assistants must ALWAYS adhere to state and local laws and regulations! As an integral part of the allied health care team medical assistants must demonstrate practice consistent with legal standards and state regulations that may apply. Since all fifty (50) states vary in their regulations as to the definition, training standards and scope of practice of the medical assistant, specific state requirements for practice must be identified and met by the concerned individual within the state they work!

Nationally recognized certification bodies for medical assistants, however, may further define and regulate the role of the medical assistant. Medical assistants working in a medical office setting must adhere to the rules, regulations and requirements mandated by their state in which they practice as well as those imposed by their overseeing professional membership association.


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