Scope of practice.
Effective Mar 25, 2009Mar. 25, 1986, D.C. Law 6-99, § 641; as added Mar. 6, 2007, D.C. Law 16-228, § 2(i), 53 DCR 10244; Mar. 25, 2009, D.C. Law 17-353, § 150, 56 DCR 1117
- (a) A surgical assistant shall be licensed by the Board of Medicine before practicing as a surgical assistant within the District of Columbia.
(b) An individual licensed to practice as a surgical assistant, as that practice is defined in § 3-1201.02(20) shall have the authority to:
- (1) Provide local infiltration or the topical application of a local anesthetic and hemostatic agents at the operative site;
- (2) Incise tissues;
- (3) Ligate and approximate tissues with sutures and clamps;
- (4) Apply tourniquets, casts, immobilizers, and surgical dressings;
- (5) Check the placement and operation of equipment;
- (6) Assist in moving and positioning the patient;
- (7) Assist the surgeon in draping the patient;
- (8) Prepare a patient by cleaning, shaving, and sterilizing the incision area;
- (9) Retract tissue and expose the operating field area during operative procedures;
- (10) Place suture ligatures and clamp, tie, and clip blood vessels to control bleeding during surgical entry;
- (11) Use cautery for hemostasis under direct supervision;
- (12) Assist in closure of skin and subcutaneous tissue;
- (13) Assist in the cleanup of the surgical suite; and
- (14) Check and restock the surgical suite.
(c) A surgical assistant shall not:
- (1) Perform any surgical procedure independently;
- (2) Have prescriptive authority; or
- (3) Write any progress notes or orders on hospitalized patients, except operative notes.
- (d) A supervising surgeon shall perform the critical portions of a surgical procedure and shall remain immediately available in the surgical suite for delegated acts that the surgical assistant performs or to respond to any emergency. Telecommunication shall not suffice as a means for directing delegated acts.
- (e) For the purposes of this section, the term “supervising surgeon” means a surgeon licensed by the Board who delegates to a licensed surgical assistant surgical assisting and oversees and accepts responsibility for the surgical assisting.
History
Mar. 25, 1986, D.C. Law 6-99, § 641
as added Mar. 6, 2007, D.C. Law 16-228, § 2(i), 53 DCR 10244
Mar. 25, 2009, D.C. Law 17-353, § 150, 56 DCR 1117
Effect of Amendments
D.C. Law 17-353 validated a previously made technical correction in subsec. (e).