The Honorable Gary Merritt State Representative, 20th District State Capitol, Room 175-W Topeka, Kansas 66612
Dear Representative Merritt:
As representative of the twentieth district, you inquire whether the language contained in K.S.A.
"For the purpose of this act the following persons shall be deemed to be engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery:
"(a) Persons who publicly profess to be physicians or surgeons, or publicly profess to assume the duties incident to the practice of medicine and surgery or any of their branches.
"(b) Persons who prescribe, recommend or furnish medicine or drugs, or perform any surgical operation of whatever nature by the use of any surgical instrument, procedure, equipment or mechanical device for the diagnosis, cure or relief of any wounds, fractures, bodily injury, infirmity, disease, physical or mental illness or psychological disorder, of human beings.
"(c) Persons who attach to their name the title M.D., surgeon, physician, physician and surgeon, or any other word or abbreviation indicating that they are engaged in the treatment or diagnosis of ailments, diseases or injuries of human beings."
The statute broadly defines the scope of practice of medicine and surgery and includes any person who professes to assume the requisite duties. The statute defines the duties as prescribing or furnishing medicine or performing any surgical operation for the diagnosis, cure or relief of any wounds, fractures, bodily injury, infirmity, disease, physical or mental illness of human beings. Additionally, subsection (c) defines the practice as engaging in the treatment or diagnosis of ailments, diseases or injuries in humans. At issue is whether this statute authorizes doctors of medicine and surgery to treat patients by manual manipulation.
When a question law involves the interpretation of a statute, it is the function of the court to interpret the statute to give it the effect intended by the legislature. State v. Gonzales,
The Kansas Supreme Court considered the language found in K.S.A.
When construing a statute, ordinary words are to be given their ordinary meaning which means that words used in a statute should be construed according to context and approved usage of the language. Stateex rel. Stephan v. Kansas Racing Commission,
In a medical context, the term manipulation is a general term often used to describe procedures performed by medical doctors, osteopaths, physical therapists and chiropractors. 1B Attorney's Textbook of Medicine
1237 (3d ed. 1994). See also: Schmidt, Attorneys' Dictionary of Medicineand Word Finder M-39 (1995); 3 Ausman and Snyder's Medical LibraryLawyers Edition 4:29 (1993); The Sloan-Dorland Annotated Medical-LegalDictionary 432 (1987); Stedman's Medical Dictionary 5th UnabridgedLawyer's Edition 832 (1982). As such the procedures performed vary, giving the term different definitions depending on the context in which it is found. See generally, Mississippi Farm Bureau Mutual InsuranceCompany v. Garrett,
It is clear from these examples that the term manual manipulation is not a term of art which has only one definition and found only within one practice or another. Thus, a finding that manual manipulation as generally defined is not authorized by K.S.A.
The legislature clearly intended the distinctions between healing arts branches not be obliterated. K.S.A.
Thus the overlap of the term does not mean that the professions or healing arts themselves overlap. See McKissick v. Fry,
Similarly, K.S.A.
In light of the possible interpretations for the term manual manipulation, in our judgment the term must be interpreted in context. It is thus our opinion that while manual manipulation as defined generally may include methods of practice authorized to one or another profession or both, chiropractic manual manipulation as taught in accredited schools of chiropractic is not within the scope of practice of medicine and surgery as defined by K.S.A.
Very truly yours,
CARLA J. STOVALL Attorney General of Kansas
Guen Easley Assistant Attorney General
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