N.Y. Public Health Law § 230
7.
9-c.
10. Professional misconduct proceedings shall consist of: * (a) Investigation. (i) (A) The board for professional medical conduct, by the director of the office of professional medical conduct, may investigate on its own any suspected professional misconduct, and shall investigate each complaint received regardless of the source. By the conclusion of a preliminary review, including an internal clinical review, the director shall determine if a report is based solely upon the recommendation or provision of a treatment modality by a licensee that is not universally accepted by the medical profession, including but not limited to varying modalities used in the treatment of Lyme disease or other tick-borne diseases. Upon a determination by the director that a report is based solely upon the provision of a treatment modality that is not universally accepted, no further review shall be conducted and no charges shall be brought. Nothing in this section shall preclude the director from making such a determination earlier in, or subsequent to, a preliminary review. (B) The director of the office of professional medical conduct shall cause a preliminary review of every report made to the department pursuant to section twenty-eight hundred three-e as added by chapter eight hundred sixty-six of the laws of nineteen hundred eighty, sections twenty-eight hundred five-l and forty-four hundred five-b of this chapter, and section three hundred fifteen of the insurance law, to determine if such report reasonably appears to reflect physician conduct warranting further investigation pursuant to this subparagraph.
(iii) In the investigation of cases referred to an investigation committee, the licensee being investigated shall have an opportunity to be interviewed by the office of professional medical conduct in order to provide an explanation of the issues under investigation. Providing an opportunity for such an interview shall be a condition precedent to the convening of an investigation committee on professional misconduct of the board for professional medical conduct.
(ii) When a license has been: (A) revoked or annulled without stay pursuant to subdivision four or five of section two hundred thirty-a of this title; (B) surrendered by a licensee; (C) suspended without stay for more than one hundred eighty days; or (D) restricted to prohibit the practice of medicine or to preclude the delivery of patient care, the licensee whose license has been so revoked, surrendered, annulled without stay, suspended without stay for more than one hundred eighty days, or restricted shall, within fifteen days of the effective date of the order:
11. Reporting of professional misconduct:
(c) Notwithstanding the foregoing, no physician shall be responsible for reporting pursuant to paragraph (a) of this subdivision with respect to any information discovered by such physician solely as a result of:
(d) In the event that a physician or administrator of a hospital established pursuant to article twenty-eight of this chapter shall reasonably be unable to determine if any information which he or she has is such that it does reasonably appear to show that a licensee is guilty of professional misconduct and therefore creates an obligation on such physician or such administrator to make a report pursuant to paragraph (a) hereof, he or she may either:
(f) A violation of this subdivision shall not be subject to the provisions of sections twelve and twelve-b of this chapter. * (g) Any physician committee of the Medical Society of the State of New York, the New York State Osteopathic Society or a county medical society referred to in subparagraph (ii) of paragraph (c) of this subdivision shall develop procedures in consultation with, and approved by, the commissioner of the department of health, including but not limited to the following:
13.
18.