(a) If a physician's license has been expired for one year, it is considered to have been canceled, and the physician may not renew the license. The physician may obtain a new license by submitting to reexamination and complying with the requirements and procedures for obtaining an original license.
(1) The examinations required by this section are:
- (A) the Texas jurisprudence examination; and
(B) SPEX, unless the Applicant:
- (i) has passed a licensure examination or has obtained specialty certification, recertification, or passed an examination of continued demonstration of qualifications by a board that is a member of the American Board of Medical Specialties or the Bureau of Osteopathic Specialists within the preceding ten years; or
- (ii) has been in a training program approved by the board within six months prior to application for relicensure.
(2) The additional requirements for this new license shall be as required within the following sections:
- (A) Section 163.2 of this title (relating to Licensure for United States and Canadian Medical School Graduates);
- (B) Section 163.3 of this title (relating to Licensure for Graduates of Unapproved Medical Schools);
- (C) Section 163.4 of this title (relating to Procedural Rules for all Licensure Applicants); and
- (D) Section 163.5 of this title (relating to Licensure Documentation).
(b) A person may qualify for renewal of his or her original license without reexamination if that person:
- (1) held a license previously in this state;
- (2) moved to another state
- (3) practiced in that other state for not more than two years since the expiration of his or her Texas license; and
- (4) files an application for relicensure under subsection (a)(2) of this section.
Source Note:The provisions of this §163.10 adopted to be effective November 10, 1999, 24 TexReg 9835.