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CHIROPRACTIC STANDARDS |
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(THE INFORMATION IN THIS SITE
APPLIES TO GEORGIA ONLY)
Disclaimer: This is only one of the important Georgia Code sections that might apply to your medical malpractice claim. It is supplied here only for general background information and should not be relied upon without reviewing your legal situation with a lawyer and also making sure you are using the annual version of the code that applies to your situation. That may or may not be the version of the code that was in existence on the date of the incident. Other codes and case law may also apply.
43-9-16. Scope of practice; injury from want of
reasonable degree of care is a tort
(a) Chiropractors who have complied with this chapter shall
have the right to practice chiropractic as defined in paragraph (2) of Code
Section 43-9-1 and to evaluate, diagnose, and adjust patients according to
specific chiropractic methods in order to correct spinal subluxations or to
adjust the articulations of the human body. Chiropractors shall observe all
applicable public health regulations.
(b) The chiropractic adjustment of the spine or articulations of the human
body may include manual adjustments and adjustments by means of electrical
and mechanical devices which produce traction or vibration. Chiropractors
who have complied with this chapter may also use modalities. Modalities
include any physical agent applied to produce therapeutic change to biologic
tissues including thermal, acoustic, noninvasive light, mechanical, or
electric energy, hot or cold packs, ultrasound, galvanism, microwave,
diathermy, and electrical stimulation. Chiropractors who have complied with
this chapter may utilize and recommend therapeutic procedures effecting
change through the application of clinical skills and services that attempt
to improve function, including therapeutic exercise, therapeutic activities,
manual therapy techniques, massage, and structural supports as they relate
to the articulations of the human body; provided, however, that the same
shall not be construed to allow chiropractors to treat patients outside the
scope of practice of chiropractic as set forth in this chapter.
(c) Chiropractors who have complied with this chapter may utilize those
modalities and procedures described in subsection (b) of this Code section,
provided the chiropractor shall have completed a course of study containing
a minimum of 120 hours of instruction in the proper utilization of those
procedures in accordance with the guidelines set forth by the Council on
Chiropractic Education or its successor and is qualified and so certified in
that proper utilization.
(d) Chiropractors who have complied with this chapter shall have the right
to sign health certificates, reporting to the proper health officers the
same as other practitioners.
(e) Chiropractors shall not prescribe or administer medicine to patients,
perform surgery, or practice obstetrics or osteopathy.
(f) Chiropractors shall not use venipuncture, capillary puncture,
acupuncture, or any other technique which is invasive of the human body
either by penetrating the skin or through any of the orifices of the body or
through the use of colonics. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed
to prohibit a chiropractor who is licensed to perform acupuncture under
Article 3 of Chapter 34 of this title from engaging in the practice of
acupuncture.
(g) A person professing to practice chiropractic for compensation must bring
to the exercise of that person's profession a reasonable degree of care and
skill. Any injury resulting from a want of such care and skill shall be a
tort for which a recovery may be had. If a chiropractor performs upon a
patient any act authorized to be so performed under this chapter but which
act also constitutes a standard procedure of the practice of medicine,
including but not limited to the use of modalities such as those described
in subsection (b) of this Code section and X-rays, under similar
circumstances the chiropractor shall be held to the same standard of care as
would licensed doctors of medicine who are qualified to and who actually
perform those acts under similar conditions and like circumstances.
(h) A licensed practitioner of chiropractic may use only the title
"chiropractor," or "doctor of chiropractic," or "D.C."
(i) Chiropractors who have complied with this chapter may recommend the use
of nutritional and dietary supplements. Any such recommendation of
nutritional and dietary supplements shall not be construed to allow
chiropractors to treat patients outside the scope of the practice of
chiropractic as set forth in this chapter nor shall this subsection be
construed to allow chiropractors to sell at a profit any such nutritional
and dietary supplements without providing their generic name. Nothing in
this subsection shall preclude compliance with Chapter 8 of Title 48,
relating to the collection of sales and use taxes.
HISTORY: Ga. L. 1921, p. 166, §
7; Code 1933, § 84-509; Ga. L. 1977, p. 232, § 1; Ga. L. 1982, p. 3, § 43;
Ga. L. 1986, p. 1534, § 1; Ga. L. 1988, p. 485, § 1; Ga. L. 1989, p. 460, §
1; Ga. L. 1993, p. 1719, § 1; Ga. L. 2000, p. 538, § 1.1; Ga. L. 2007, p.
494, § 1/SB 102; Ga. L. 2008, p. 324, § 43/SB 455.
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This site contains only general background information and is not intended to constitute specific legal advice or establish an attorney/client relationship. Malpractice laws vary from state to state and are constantly changing. If you think you may have a malpractice case you should promptly contact a lawyer in your state with experience in handling malpractice cases. |
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