Sept. 19, 2024
The North Carolina Medical Board ("Board") recently issued a guidance document describing a situation involving a physician serving as the medical director of a medical spa, where the medical spa is owned by a non-licensee.
The physician in question is paid $2,000 per month for his “services” as medical director, but he is not required to be present at the medical spa or participate in any consultations with clients. Several months into the arrangement, the physician learns that he has been listed as the primary supervising physician of a physician assistant employed by the medical spa, and that physician assistant is being investigated by the Board after a client suffered blistering facial burns following a laser facial performed by the physician assistant. When interviewed by the Board, the physician notes he does not know the physician assistant, never agreed to supervise her, and that his supervision of physician assistants or nurse practitioners was never discussed and is not mentioned in his employment agreement with the medical spa.
The fact situation offers a “greatest hits” of circumstances the Board considers indicative of an arrangement that violates North Carolina's corporate practice of medicine doctrine. Key concerns include:
For these reasons, physicians and others involved in the set-up and operation of medical spas in North Carolina should familiarize themselves with the Board's new guidance and remain aware of the changing regulatory landscape affecting such operations.
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