N.Y. Public Health Law Section 2805-U
Credentialing and privileging of health care practitioners providing telemedicine services


1.

For purposes of this section:

(a)

“Distant site hospital” means a hospital licensed pursuant to this article or a hospital licensed by another state, that has entered into an agreement with an originating hospital to make available one or more health care practitioners that are members of its clinical staff to the originating hospital for the purposes of providing telemedicine services. To qualify as a distant site hospital for purposes of this article, a hospital licensed by another state must comply with the federal regulations governing participation by hospitals in Medicare.

(b)

“Health care practitioner” shall mean a person licensed pursuant to article one hundred thirty-one, one hundred thirty-one-B, one hundred thirty-three, one hundred thirty-nine, one hundred forty, one hundred forty-one, one hundred forty-three, one hundred forty-four, one hundred fifty-three, one hundred fifty-four or one hundred fifty-nine of the education law, or as otherwise authorized by the commissioner.

(c)

“Originating hospital” means the hospital at which a patient is located at the time telemedicine services are provided to him or her.

(d)

“Telemedicine” means the delivery of clinical health care services by means of real time two-way electronic audio-visual communications which facilitate the assessment, diagnosis, consultation, treatment, education, care management and self management of a patient’s health care while such patient is at the originating site and the health care provider is at a distant site.

2.

When telemedicine services are provided to an originating hospital’s patients pursuant to an agreement with a distant site hospital, the originating hospital may, in lieu of satisfying the requirements set forth in § 2805-K (Investigations prior to granting or renewing privileges)section twenty-eight hundred five-k of this article, rely on the credentialing and privileging decisions made by the distant site hospital in granting or renewing privileges to a health care practitioner who is a member of the clinical staff of the distant site hospital, provided that:

(a)

the distant site hospital participates in Medicare and Medicaid;

(b)

each health care practitioner providing telemedicine is licensed to practice in this state;

(c)

the distant site hospital, in accordance with requirements otherwise applicable to that hospital, collects and evaluates all credentialing information concerning each health care practitioner providing telemedicine services, performs all required verification activities, and acts on behalf of the originating site hospital for such credentialing purposes;

(d)

the distant site hospital reviews periodically, at least every two years, and as otherwise warranted based on outcomes, complaints or other circumstances, the credentials, privileges, physical and mental capacity, and competence in delivering health care services of each health care practitioner providing telemedicine services, consistent with requirements otherwise applicable to that hospital; reports the results of such review to the originating hospital; and notifies the originating hospital immediately upon any suspension, revocation, or limitation of such privileges;

(e)

with respect to each distant site health care practitioner who holds privileges at the originating hospital, the originating hospital conducts a periodic internal review, at least every two years, of the distant site practitioner’s performance of these privileges and provides the distant site hospital with such performance information for use in the distant hospital’s periodic appraisal of the distant site physician or health care practitioner. Such information shall include, at a minimum, all adverse events that result from the telemedicine services provided by the distant site health care practitioner to the originating hospital’s patients, all complaints the originating hospital has received about the distant site practitioner, and any revocation, suspension or limitation of the distant site practitioner’s privileges by the originating hospital; and

(f)

the agreement entered into between the originating site hospital and distant site hospital shall be in writing and shall, at a minimum:

(i)

provide the categories of health care practitioners that are eligible candidates for appointment to the originating hospital’s clinical staff, (ii) require the governing body of the distant site hospital to comply with the Medicare conditions of participation governing the appointment of medical staff with regard to the health care practitioners providing telemedicine services, (iii) itemize the credentialing information to be collected and the required verification activities to be performed by the distant site hospital and relied upon by the originating hospital in considering the recommendations of the distant site hospital, (iv) require each distant site health care practitioner providing telemedicine services to be licensed to practice in this state and privileged at the distant site hospital, (v) require the distant site hospital to provide to the originating hospital a current list of each distant site health care practitioner’s privileges at the distant site hospital, and

(vi)

require the distant site hospital to conduct a periodic review consistent with requirements otherwise applicable to that hospital, at least every two years, and as otherwise warranted based on outcomes, complaints or other circumstances, the credentials, privileges, physical and mental capacity, and competence in delivering health care services of each health care practitioner providing telemedicine services; to provide the originating hospital with the results of such review; and to notify the originating hospital immediately upon any suspension, revocation, or limitation of such privileges.

3.

Nothing in this section shall be construed as allowing an originating hospital to delegate its authority over and responsibility for decisions concerning the credentialing and granting staff membership or professional privileges to health care practitioners providing telemedicine services.

4.

Notwithstanding any contrary provision of law, an originating hospital shall not be required to provide a physical examination or to maintain recorded medical history including immunizations for a health care provider providing consultations solely through telemedicine from a distant site hospital.

Source: Section 2805-U — Credentialing and privileging of health care practitioners providing telemedicine services, https://www.­nysenate.­gov/legislation/laws/PBH/2805-U (updated Sep. 22, 2014; accessed Oct. 26, 2024).

2800
Declaration of policy and statement of purpose
2801
Definitions
2801‑A
Establishment or incorporation of hospitals
2801‑B
Improper practices in hospital staff appointments and extension of professional privileges prohibited
2801‑C
Injunctions
2801‑D
Private actions by patients of residential health care facilities
2801‑E
Voluntary residential health care facility rightsizing demonstration program
2801‑F
Residential health care facility quality incentive payment program
2801‑G
Community forum on hospital closure
2801‑H
Personal caregiving and compassionate caregiving visitors to nursing home residents during declared local or state health emergencies
2802
Approval of construction
2802‑A
Transitional care unit demonstration program
2802‑B
Health equity impact assessments
2803
Commissioner and council
2803‑A
Authority to contract
2803‑AA
Sickle cell disease information distribution
2803‑AA*2
Nursing home infection control competency audit
2803‑B
Uniform reports and accounting systems for hospital costs
2803‑C
Rights of patients in certain medical facilities
2803‑C‑1
Rights of patients in certain medical facilities
2803‑C‑2
Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender, and people living with HIV long-term care facility residents’ bill of rights
2803‑D
Reporting abuses of persons receiving care or services in residential health care facilities
2803‑E
Residential health care facilities
2803‑E*2
Reporting incidents of possible professional misconduct
2803‑F
Respite projects
2803‑G
Board of visitors in county owned residential health care facility
2803‑H
Health related facility
2803‑I
General hospital inpatient discharge review program
2803‑J
Information for maternity patients
2803‑J*2
Nursing home nurse aide registry
2803‑K
In-patient nasogastric feeding procedures
2803‑L
Community service plans
2803‑M
Discharge of hospital patients to adult homes
2803‑N
Hospital care for maternity patients
2803‑O
Hospital care for mastectomy, lumpectomy, and lymph node dissection patients
2803‑O‑1
Required protocols for fetal demise
2803‑P
Disclosure of information concerning family violence
2803‑Q
Family councils in residential health care facilities
2803‑R
Dissemination of information about the abandoned infant protection act
2803‑S
Access to product recall information
2803‑T
Preadmission information
2803‑U
Hospital substance use disorder policies and procedures
2803‑V
Lymphedema information distribution
2803‑V*2
Standing orders for newborn care in a hospital
2803‑W
Independent quality monitors for residential health care facilities
2803‑W*2
Disclosure of information concerning pregnancy complications
2803‑X
Requirements related to nursing homes and related assets and operations
2803‑Y
Provision of residency agreement
2803‑Z
Transfer, discharge and voluntary discharge requirements for residential health care facilities
2803‑Z*2
Antimicrobial resistance prevention and education
2804
Units for hospital and health-related affairs
2804‑A
State task force on clinical practice guidelines and medical technology assessment
2805
Approval of hospitals
2805‑A
Disclosure of financial transactions
2805‑B
Admission of patients and emergency treatment of nonadmitted patients
2805‑C
Every private proprietary nursing home having a capacity of eighty patients or more may have a licensed medical doctor in attendance, upo...
2805‑D
Limitation of medical, dental or podiatric malpractice action based on lack of informed consent
2805‑E
Reports of residential health care facilities
2805‑F
Money deposited or advanced for admittance to nursing homes
2805‑G
Maintenance of records
2805‑H
Immunizations
2805‑I
Treatment of sexual offense victims and maintenance of evidence in a sexual offense
2805‑J
Medical, dental and podiatric malpractice prevention program
2805‑K
Investigations prior to granting or renewing privileges
2805‑L
Adverse event reporting
2805‑M
Confidentiality
2805‑N
Child abuse prevention
2805‑O
Identification of veterans and their spouses by nursing homes, residential health care facilities, and adult care facilities
2805‑P
Emergency treatment of rape survivors
2805‑Q
Hospital visitation by domestic partner
2805‑R
Patients unable to verbally communicate
2805‑S
Circulating nurse required
2805‑T
Clinical staffing committees and disclosure of nursing quality indicators
2805‑U
Credentialing and privileging of health care practitioners providing telemedicine services
2805‑V
Observation services
2805‑W
Patient notice of observation services
2805‑X
Hospital-home care-physician collaboration program
2805‑Y
Identification and assessment of human trafficking victims
2805‑Z
Hospital domestic violence policies and procedures
2806
Hospital operating certificates
2806‑A
Temporary operator
2806‑B
Residential health care facilities
2807
Hospital reimbursement provisions
2807‑A
General hospital nineteen hundred eighty-six and nineteen hundred eighty-seven inpatient rates and charges
2807‑AA
Nurse loan repayment program
2807‑B
Outstanding payments and reports due under subdivision eighteen of section twenty-eight hundred seven-c, sections twenty-eight hundred se...
2807‑C
General hospital inpatient reimbursement for annual rate periods beginning on or after January first, nineteen hundred eighty-eight
2807‑D
Hospital assessments
2807‑D‑1
Hospital quality contributions
2807‑DD
Temporary nursing home stability contributions
2807‑E
Uniform bills
2807‑F
Health maintenance organization payment factor
2807‑FF
New York managed care organization provider tax
2807‑I
Service and quality improvement grants
2807‑J
Patient services payments
2807‑K
General hospital indigent care pool
2807‑L
Health care initiatives pool distributions
2807‑M
Distribution of the professional education pools
2807‑N
Palliative care education and training
2807‑O
Early intervention services pool
2807‑P
Comprehensive diagnostic and treatment centers indigent care program
2807‑R
Funding for expansion of cancer services
2807‑S
Professional education pool funding
2807‑T
Assessments on covered lives
2807‑U
Transfers for tax credits
2807‑V
Tobacco control and insurance initiatives pool distributions
2807‑W
High need indigent care adjustment pool
2807‑X
Grants for long term care demonstration projects
2807‑Y
Pool administration
2807‑Z
Review of eligible federally qualified health center capital projects
2808
Residential health care facilities
2808‑A
Liability of certain persons
2808‑B
Certification of financial statements and financial information
2808‑C
Reimbursement of general hospital inpatient services
2808‑D
Nursing home quality improvement demonstration program
2808‑E
Residential health care for children with medical fragility in transition to young adults and young adults with medical fragility demonst...
2808‑E*2
Nursing home ratings
2809
Residential health care facilities
2810
Residential health care facilities
2811
Discounts and splitting fees with medical referral services
2812
Construction
2813
Separability
2814
Health networks, global budgeting, and health care demonstrations
2815
Health facility restructuring program
2815‑A
Community health care revolving capital fund
2816
Statewide planning and research cooperative system
2816‑A
Cardiac services information
2817
Community health centers capital program
2818
Health care efficiency and affordability law of New Yorkers (HEAL NY) capital grant program
2819
Hospital acquired infection reporting
2820
Home based primary care for the elderly demonstration project
2821
State electronic health records (EHR) loan program
2822
Residential care off-site facility demonstration project
2823
Supportive housing development program
2824
Central service technicians
2824*2
Surgical technology and surgical technologists
2825
Capital restructuring financing program
2825‑A
Health care facility transformation program: Kings county project
2825‑B
Oneida county health care facility transformation program: Oneida county project
2825‑C
Essential health care provider support program
2825‑D
Health care facility transformation program: statewide
2825‑E
Health care facility transformation program: statewide II
2825‑F
Health care facility transformation program: statewide III
2825‑G
Health care facility transformation program: statewide IV
2825‑H
Health care facility transformation program: statewide V
2825‑I
Healthcare safety net transformation program
2826
Temporary adjustment to reimbursement rates
2827
Plant-based food options
2828
Residential health care facilities
2828*2
Essential support persons allowed for individuals with disabilities during a state of emergency
2829
Nursing homes
2830
Surgical smoke evacuation
2830*2
Regulation of the billing of facility fees

Accessed:
Oct. 26, 2024

Last modified:
Sep. 22, 2014

§ 2805-U’s source at nysenate​.gov

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