175 Ky. 416 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1917
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The appellees are the members of the State Board of Health. The facts agreed upon and upon which the action is based will definitely describe the personnel of the appellants and their interest in the controversy, as vell as the question to be determined. The action is an agreed one. The statement of facts agreed upon is substantially as follows:
The appellant, Louis Frank, is a duly licensed physician and surgeon and has complied with all of the requirements of the law, which regulate the practice of medicine, in this state. However, he limits his practice to surgery. The appellant, Margaret Hatfield, is a duly licensed and trained nurse and has complied with all the requirements of the statutes relating to graduate or trained nurses; has had more than six years ’ experience as such and has made a special study of administering anesthetics to patients, submitting to surgical operations, and has taken a special course of instruction upon that subject, and has administered anesthetics to more than twelve hundred patients, who have undergone surgical operations, but she has never taken an examination for the purpose or obtained a certificate from the State Board of Health, which would authorize her to administer anesthetics or to engage in the practice of medicine, and does not have any license, which authorizes her to practice medicine in any of its branches, either in this state or elsewhere. She is employed by her co-appellant, Frank, to administer anesthetics to patients upon whom he performs surgical operations. He directs the kind of anesthetic to be administered, and the administration, in each case, is made by her under his
The appellees insist, that, upon the facts agreed upon and the proof on file, that the appellant, Margaret Hatfield, is practicing medicine within the meaning of the law in this state, while the contrary is the contention of the appellants. The court below held to the view of the appellees and hence this appeal.
The authority of the legislature to regulate the practice of medicine, as a profession requiring special training for the proper performance of its duties and to require persons before engaging in such services, to undergo an examination by an authorized board and to obtain a certificate or license, as the authority to engage in the practice, and to place a penalty upon such as undertake such practice without a license or certificate is unquestioned. Driscoll v. Commonwealth, 93 Ky. 393; Webster v. State Board of Health, 130 Ky. 191; Hargan v. Purdy, 93 Ky. 424.
The legislature having authority to determine of what the practice of medicine consists, and to regulate it by reasonable requirements of those, who engage in it and to penalize the violations of the laws pertaining to it, the question in the instant ease, must be determined by a reference to the statutes, as the statutes undertake to define what the practice of medicine is and under what circumstances it may be engaged in. Chapter 85, Kentucky Statutes, which regulates the practice of medicine and surgery by section 2613, makes it unlawful for any person to practice medicine in any of its branches within the limits of this state, who has not registered in the county clerk’s office in the county in which he resides a certificate of the State Board of Health authorizing him to engage in the practice. Other sections of the statute prescribe under what conditions the State Board-of Health may grant certificates to persons desiring to engage in the practice of medicine, and prescribe the manner of their examination, the extent of the examination and the branches touching which it is necessary to give them an examination. When the statute was first enacted.it had application only to per
“Any other person applying for authority to treat the sick or injured or in any way discharge the duties usually performed by physicians, whether by medical, surgical or mechanical means, shall apply to the State Board of Health, who shall examine them as to their competency in such manner as they may deem fair and best, but such examination shall always include anatomy, physiology, and pathology, and the term, “practice of medicine” as used in this act, shall be construed to be the treatment of any human ailment or infirmity by any method; but this shall not include trained or other! nurses, or persons selling proprietary medicines when' not traveling as a troupe or troupes composed of two or; more persons. But this act shall not apply to the practice of Christian Science.”
■By section 2618, supra, another thing was declared to be the practice of medicine within the meaning of the act and that was, “To open an office for such purpose or to announce to the public in any way a readiness to treat- the sick and afflicted, shall be deemed to engage in the practice of medicine within the meaning of tins act”
' The last mentioned section, supra, is the one which imposes a penalty for any violation of the law against empiricism, and imposes a penalty upon “any person living in this state or any person coming into this state, yrho shall practice medicine or attempt to practice medi
The treatment of any human ailment or infirmity by the use of medical agencies, in a popular sense, is well understood. The meaning in which the legislative authority intended the term “practice of medicine” to be understood in a statute, which makes the practice-of medicine to consist of the treatment of diseases by medical agencies, is the popular sense in which that term is used and understood. Nelson v. State Board of Health, supra; State v. Mylod, 40 Atl. 753; Stewart v. Raab, 56 N. W. 256. In other jurisdictions the courts haye defined the meaning of the term “to practice medicine,” but in most of the instances they were merely defining, the term under certain statutory regulations, and the statutes not being altogether similar to ours, very little help is. rendered, by such decisions, in an attempt to define the term ■as used in our statutes. The Supreme Court of Kansas, .in Underwood v. Scott, 23 Pac. 942,-defined the practice of medicine in a way which seems to accord with reason and authority. It defined it thus: • -
“First, in adjudging the nature, character and symptoms of the disease; second, in determining the proper remedy for it; third, in giving or prescribing the application of the remedy to the disease.”
It seems, that it would be impossible, to practice medicine in any sense in which the term could be used, without the practitioner making a diagnosis of the symptoms of the patient, and to determine what disease the’patient is afflicted with, and then to determine and prescribe, what remedy should be used, in attempting to treat the ailment or infirmity with which the patient is suffering. The mere giving of medicines, which are prescribed-by a physician in charge, who has made a diagnosis and determined the disease, and determined the remedy and directs the manner and the time and the character of-the medicines to be administered, has never been considered engaging in the practice of medicine. The person who administers medicine under such a state of case, does- not exercise any judgment as to the character of the disease nor the necessary remedy nor the manner in which nor
It is, however, insisted that the legislative authority has defined the meaning of the term “practice of medicine” and that the definition, as given in the statute being the controlling one, that is made the “practice of medicine,” which has not heretofore been such and that the rules usually applied heretofore are not applicable to a case under the statutes. It will be observed that subsection 5, of section 2615, supra, has defined the term “practice of medicine,” as used in the act, to be the “treatment of any human ailment or infirmity by any method”;-and that by section 2618, supra, “to open an office for such purpose or to announce to the public in any way a readiness to treat the sick or afflicted, shall be deemed to be engaged in the practice of medicine within the meaning of the act.” It having been agreed that the appellant, Hatfield, has never opened an office or announced to the public in any way a readiness to treat the sick or afflicted, disposes of any contention, that she is engaged in the practice of medicine, according to the terms above quoted from section 2618, supra.
It remains to be determined, whether the service, she performs, shall be deemed the practice of medicine, within the meaning of sub-section 5, of section 2615, supra. It is agreed, as before stated, that she has never prescribed for any person nor treated any human ailment or infirmity by any method, by either medical, surgical or mechanical means, unless the administration of anesthetics to a patient undergoing or preparing to undergo a surgical operation, in the presence of, and according to the directions of the surgeon, in charge, who prescribed the anesthetic to be administered, is the “treatment of any human ailment or infirmity by any method,” as the
It is, however, contended that the trained nurse, who administers an anesthetic, must, at some time, exercise her own judgment and thus bring her within the definition of “to practice medicine,” in this, that the surgeon -is engaged with his duties in performing, the operation -and -it may become necessary to apply another, anes
The practice of surgery is one-method of the “practice of medicine,” and consists of an'attempt to cure or alleviate a bodily -infirmity or ailmént by surgical means, that is, to treat the ailment or infirmity by applying manual operations or instrumental appliances, or by the use of the surgical knife. To enable the patient- to -bear the operation with a greater degree of safety and -to recover ■from the effects of it more surely and rapidly,'oftentimes, his general physical condition is improved by the administration of medicines beforehand; he is bathed and certain portions of the body • specially sterilized to prevent infection of any kind, and anesthetics administered to deaden the pain of the operation. ' The duties ¿re performed by assistants selectéd by the "surgeons, and who perform them under his direction | and supervision, and when performed by them, as directed,'without
It is tbe duty of tbe surgeon, who would undertake a surgical operation to make a diagnosis of tbe symptoms of tbe patient, to determine bis ailment, and tbe remedy necessary, and if be determines that an anesthetic is necessary for tbe performance of tbe operation, to determine what anesthetic is necessary and the manner of its administration, and to give the necessary directions for so doing and to supervise and direct its giving, and in tbe selection of an assistant to administer tbe anesthetic, be should exercise tbe same degree of knowledge, skill and care as be is required by law to exercise in the performance of any part of tbe operation. 30 Cyc. 1581.
We are of tbe opinion that in tbe performance of tbe services by appellant, Hatfield, in tbe way and under tbe circumstances as agreed upon, as being tbe facts in this case, that she is not engaged in tbe practice of medicine within the meaning of the statute laws upon that subject, and hence the judgment appealed from is reversed and tbe cause remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.