After July 24, 1983, if appropriate, applicant groups shall
explain each of the following factors to the extent requested by
the legislative committees of reference:
(1) A definition of the problem and why regulation is
necessary:
(a) The nature of the potential harm to the public if the
health profession is not regulated, and the extent to which there
is a threat to public health and safety;
(b) The extent to which consumers need and will benefit from
a method of regulation identifying competent practitioners,
indicating typical employers, if any, of practitioners in the
health profession; and
(c) The extent of autonomy a practitioner has, as indicated
by:
(i) The extent to which the health profession calls for
independent judgment and the extent of skill or experience
required in making the independent judgment; and
(ii) The extent to which practitioners are supervised;
(2) The efforts made to address the problem:
(a) Voluntary efforts, if any, by members of the health
profession to:
(i) Establish a code of ethics; or
(ii) Help resolve disputes between health practitioners and
consumers; and
(b) Recourse to and the extent of use of applicable law and
whether it could be strengthened to control the problem;
(3) The alternatives considered:
(a) Regulation of business employers or practitioners rather
than employee practitioners;
(b) Regulation of the program or service rather than the
individual practitioners;
(c) Registration of all practitioners;
(d) Certification of all practitioners;
(e) Other alternatives;
(f) Why the use of the alternatives specified in this
subsection would not be adequate to protect the public interest;
and
(g) Why licensing would serve to protect the public
interest;
(4) The benefit to the public if regulation is granted:
(a) The extent to which the incidence of specific problems
present in the unregulated health profession can reasonably be
expected to be reduced by regulation;
(b) Whether the public can identify qualified practitioners;
(c) The extent to which the public can be confident that
qualified practitioners are competent:
(i) Whether the proposed regulatory entity would be a board
composed of members of the profession and public members, or a
state agency, or both, and, if appropriate, their respective
responsibilities in administering the system of registration,
certification, or licensure, including the composition of the
board and the number of public members, if any; the powers and
duties of the board or state agency regarding examinations and
for cause revocation, suspension, and nonrenewal of
registrations, certificates, or licenses; the promulgation of
rules and canons of ethics; the conduct of inspections; the
receipt of complaints and disciplinary action taken against
practitioners; and how fees would be levied and collected to
cover the expenses of administering and operating the regulatory
system;
(ii) If there is a grandfather clause, whether such
practitioners will be required to meet the prerequisite
qualifications established by the regulatory entity at a later
date;
(iii) The nature of the standards proposed for registration,
certification, or licensure as compared with the standards of
other jurisdictions;
(iv) Whether the regulatory entity would be authorized to
enter into reciprocity agreements with other jurisdictions;
(v) The nature and duration of any training including, but
not limited to, whether the training includes a substantial
amount of supervised field experience; whether training programs
exist in this state; if there will be an experience requirement;
whether the experience must be acquired under a registered,
certificated, or licensed practitioner; whether there are
alternative routes of entry or methods of meeting the
prerequisite qualifications; whether all applicants will be
required to pass an examination; and, if an examination is
required, by whom it will be developed and how the costs of
development will be met; and
(vi) What additional training programs are anticipated to be
necessary to assure training accessible statewide; the
anticipated time required to establish the additional training
programs; the types of institutions capable of providing the
training; a description of how training programs will meet the
needs of the expected workforce, including reentry workers,
minorities, placebound students, and others;
(d) Assurance of the public that practitioners have
maintained their competence:
(i) Whether the registration, certification, or licensure
will carry an expiration date; and
(ii) Whether renewal will be based only upon payment of a
fee, or whether renewal will involve reexamination, peer review,
or other enforcement;
(5) The extent to which regulation might harm the public:
(a) The extent to which regulation will restrict entry into
the health profession:
(i) Whether the proposed standards are more restrictive than
necessary to insure safe and effective performance; and
(ii) Whether the proposed legislation requires registered,
certificated, or licensed practitioners in other jurisdictions
who migrate to this state to qualify in the same manner as state
applicants for registration, certification, and licensure when
the other jurisdiction has substantially equivalent requirements
for registration, certification, or licensure as those in this
state; and
(b) Whether there are similar professions to that of the
applicant group which should be included in, or portions of the
applicant group which should be excluded from, the proposed
legislation;
(6) The maintenance of standards:
(a) Whether effective quality assurance standards exist in
the health profession, such as legal requirements associated with
specific programs that define or enforce standards, or a code of
ethics; and
(b) How the proposed legislation will assure quality:
(i) The extent to which a code of ethics, if any, will be
adopted; and
(ii) The grounds for suspension or revocation of
registration, certification, or licensure;
(7) A description of the group proposed for regulation,
including a list of associations, organizations, and other groups
representing the practitioners in this state, an estimate of the
number of practitioners in each group, and whether the groups
represent different levels of practice; and
(8) The expected costs of regulation:
(a) The impact registration, certification, or licensure
will have on the costs of the services to the public;
(b) The cost to the state and to the general public of
implementing the proposed legislation; and
(c) The cost to the state and the members of the group
proposed for regulation for the required education, including
projected tuition and expenses and expected increases in training
programs, staffing, and enrollments at state training
institutions.
[1991 c 332 § 6; 1983 c 168 § 3.]
NOTES:
Application to scope of practice -- Captions not law -- 1991 c 332: See notes following RCW 18.130.010.