Colorado Code § 12-240-121

Unprofessional conduct - definitions
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(1) "Unprofessional conduct" as
used in this article 240 means:
(a) Resorting to fraud, misrepresentation, or deception in applying for, securing,
renewing, or seeking reinstatement of a license to practice medicine or a license to practice as a
physician assistant or an anesthesiologist assistant in this state or any other state, in applying for
professional liability coverage, required pursuant to section 13-64-301, or privileges at a
hospital, or in taking the examination provided for in this article 240;
(b) Any conviction of an offense of moral turpitude, a felony, or a crime that would
constitute a violation of this article 240. For purposes of this subsection (1)(b), "conviction"
includes the entry of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere or the imposition of a deferred sentence.
(c) Administering, dispensing, or prescribing any habit-forming drug or any controlled
substance as defined in section 18-18-102 (5) other than in the course of legitimate professional
practice;
(d) Any conviction of violation of any federal or state law regulating the possession,
distribution, or use of any controlled substance, as defined in section 18-18-102 (5), and, in
determining if a license should be denied, revoked, or suspended, or if the licensee should be
placed on probation, the board shall be governed by sections 12-20-202 (5) and 24-5-101. For
purposes of this subsection (1)(d), "conviction" includes the entry of a plea of guilty or nolo
contendere or the imposition of a deferred sentence.
(e) Habitual or excessive use or abuse of alcohol, a habit-forming drug, or a controlled
substance as defined in section 18-18-102 (5);
(f) The aiding or abetting, in the practice of medicine, of any person not licensed to
practice medicine as defined under this article 240 or of any person whose license to practice
medicine is suspended;
(g) (I) Except as otherwise provided in sections 12-240-138, 25-3-103.7, and 25-3-314,
practicing medicine as the partner, agent, or employee of, or in joint venture with, any person
who does not hold a license to practice medicine within this state, or practicing medicine as an
employee of, or in joint venture with, any partnership or association any of whose partners or
associates do not hold a license to practice medicine within this state, or practicing medicine as
an employee of or in joint venture with any corporation other than a professional service
corporation for the practice of medicine as described in section 12-240-138. Any licensee
holding a license to practice medicine in this state may accept employment from any person,
partnership, association, or corporation to examine and treat the employees of the person,
partnership, association, or corporation.
(II) (A) Nothing in this subsection (1)(g) shall be construed to permit a professional
service corporation for the practice of medicine, as described in section 12-240-138, to practice
medicine.
(B) Nothing in this subsection (1)(g) shall be construed to otherwise create an exception
to the corporate practice of medicine doctrine.
(h) Violating, or attempting to violate, directly or indirectly, or assisting in or abetting
the violation of or conspiring to violate any provision or term of this article 240 or an applicable
provision of article 20 or 30 of this title 12;
(i) Failing to notify the board, as required by section 12-30-108 (1), of a physical illness,
physical condition, or behavioral, mental health, or substance use disorder that impacts the
licensee's ability to perform a medical service with reasonable skill and safety to patients; failing
to act within the limitations created by a physical illness, physical condition, or behavioral,
mental health, or substance use disorder that renders the licensee unable to perform a medical
service with reasonable skill and safety to the patient; or failing to comply with the limitations
agreed to under a confidential agreement entered into pursuant to sections 12-30-108 and 12-
240-126;
(j) Any act or omission that fails to meet generally accepted standards of medical
practice;
(k) Engaging in a sexual act with a patient during the course of patient care or within six
months immediately following the termination of the licensee's professional relationship with the
patient. "Sexual act", as used in this subsection (1)(k), means sexual contact, sexual intrusion, or
sexual penetration as defined in section 18-3-401.
(l) Refusal of an attending physician to comply with the terms of a declaration executed
by a patient pursuant to the provisions of article 18 of title 15 and failure of the attending
physician to transfer care of the patient to another physician;
(m) (I) Violation of abuse of health insurance pursuant to section 18-13-119; or
(II) Advertising through newspapers, magazines, circulars, direct mail, directories, radio,
television, or otherwise that the licensee will perform any act prohibited by section 18-13-119
(3);
(n) Violation of any valid board order or any rule promulgated by the board in
conformance with law;
(o) Dispensing, injecting, or prescribing an anabolic steroid, as defined in section 18-18-
102 (3), for the purpose of the hormonal manipulation that is intended to increase muscle mass,
strength, or weight without a medical necessity to do so or for the intended purpose of improving
performance in any form of exercise, sport, or game;
(p) Dispensing or injecting an anabolic steroid, as defined in section 18-18-102 (3),
unless the anabolic steroid is dispensed from a pharmacy prescription drug outlet pursuant to a
prescription order or is dispensed by any practitioner in the course of the practitioner's
professional practice;
(q) Prescribing, distributing, or giving to a family member or to oneself except on an
emergency basis any controlled substance as defined in section 18-18-204 or as contained in
schedule II of 21 U.S.C. sec. 812, as amended;
(r) Failing to report to the board, within thirty days after an adverse action, that an
adverse action has been taken against the licensee by another licensing agency in another state or
country, a peer review body, a health-care institution, a professional or medical society or
association, a governmental agency, a law enforcement agency, or a court for acts or conduct
that would constitute grounds for disciplinary or adverse action as described in this article 240;
(s) Failing to report to the board, within thirty days, the surrender of a license or other
authorization to practice medicine in another state or jurisdiction or the surrender of membership
on any medical staff or in any medical or professional association or society while under
investigation by any of those authorities or bodies for acts or conduct similar to acts or conduct
that would constitute grounds for action as described in this article 240;
(t) Failing to accurately answer the questionnaire accompanying the renewal form as
required pursuant to section 12-240-130 (2);
(u) (I) Engaging in any of the following activities and practices: Willful and repeated
ordering or performance, without clinical justification, of demonstrably unnecessary laboratory
tests or studies; the administration, without clinical justification, of treatment that is
demonstrably unnecessary; the failure to obtain consultations or perform referrals when failing
to do so is not consistent with the standard of care for the profession; or ordering or performing,
without clinical justification, any service, X ray, or treatment that is contrary to recognized
standards of the practice of medicine as interpreted by the board.
(II) In determining which activities and practices are not consistent with the standard of
care or are contrary to recognized standards of the practice of medicine, the board shall utilize, in
addition to its own expertise, the standards developed by recognized and established
accreditation or review organizations that meet requirements established by the board by rule.
The determinations shall include but need not be limited to appropriate ordering of laboratory
tests and studies, appropriate ordering of diagnostic tests and studies, appropriate treatment of
the medical condition under review, appropriate use of consultations or referrals in patient care,
and appropriate creation and maintenance of patient records.
(v) Falsifying or repeatedly making incorrect essential entries or repeatedly failing to
make essential entries on patient records;
(w) Committing a fraudulent insurance act, as defined in section 10-1-128;
(x) Failing to establish and continuously maintain financial responsibility, as required in
section 13-64-301;
(y) Failing to respond in an honest, materially responsive, and timely manner to a
complaint issued pursuant to section 12-240-125 (4);
(z) Advertising in a manner that is misleading, deceptive, or false;
(aa) Any act or omission in the practice of telemedicine that fails to meet generally
accepted standards of medical practice;
(bb) Entering into or continuing in a mentorship relationship with an advanced practice
registered nurse or a certified midwife pursuant to sections 12-240-108 and 12-255-112 (4) that
fails to meet generally acceptable standards of medical practice;
(cc) Repealed.
(dd) Failure to comply with the requirements of section 14 of article XVIII of the state
constitution, section 25-1.5-106, or the rules promulgated by the state health agency pursuant to
section 25-1.5-106 (3);
(ee) Engaging in conversion therapy with a patient who is under eighteen years of age;
(ff) (I) Any suspension of a license pursuant to section 24-4-104 (4) as a result of a
formal charge for a crime pursuant to title 18, or that under federal law or the law of another
state would constitute a crime under title 18, where the board finds the crime is a continuing
threat to patient safety.
(II) A suspension issued pursuant to subsection (1)(ff)(I) of this section may be
continued until dismissal, acquittal, or conviction of the charges. A hearing on the suspension
may not occur until after the dismissal, acquittal, or conviction of such charge unless the licensee
opts to proceed to a hearing regarding the suspension.
(gg) Any conviction of an offense under section 18-13-131. For purposes of this
subsection (1)(gg), "conviction" includes the entry of a plea of guilty or nolo contendere or the
imposition of a deferred sentence.
(hh) On and after March 1, 2024, repeated or willful failure without reasonable cause to
comply with the requirements of completing a medical certification for a certificate of death in
accordance with any applicable deadline set forth in section 25-2-110;
(ii) Failing, without reasonable cause, to comply with the continuing medical education
requirement established in section 12-240-130.5 or to provide the required evidence of
completion of continuing medical education credit hours in response to an audit by the board
pursuant to section 12-240-130.5 (8).
(2) (a) A licensee shall not be subject to disciplinary action by the board solely for
prescribing controlled substances for the relief of intractable pain.
(b) For the purposes of this subsection (2), "intractable pain" means a pain state in which
the cause of the pain cannot be removed and for which in the generally accepted course of
medical practice no relief or cure of the cause of the pain is possible or none has been found after
reasonable efforts including, but not limited to, evaluation by the attending physician and one or
more physicians specializing in the treatment of the area, system, or organ of the body perceived
as the source of the pain.
(3) A licensee is not subject to disciplinary action by the board for issuing standing
orders and protocols regarding the use of epinephrine auto-injectors in a public or nonpublic
school in accordance with the requirements of section 22-1-119.5, for the actions taken by a
school nurse or by any designated school personnel who administers epinephrine auto-injectors
in accordance with the requirements of section 22-1-119.5, or for prescribing epinephrine auto-
injectors in accordance with the requirements of article 47 of title 25.
(4) The discipline of a license to practice medicine, of a license to practice as a physician
assistant, or of a license to practice as an anesthesiologist assistant in another state, territory, or
country shall be deemed to be unprofessional conduct. For purposes of this subsection (4),
"discipline" includes any sanction required to be reported pursuant to 45 CFR 60.8. This
subsection (4) applies only to discipline that is based upon an act or omission in the other state,
territory, or country that is defined substantially the same as unprofessional conduct pursuant to
subsection (1) of this section.
(5) (a) For purposes of this section, "alternative medicine" means those health-care
methods of diagnosis, treatment, or healing that are not generally used but that provide a
reasonable potential for therapeutic gain in a patient's medical condition that is not outweighed
by the risk of the methods. A licensee who practices alternative medicine shall inform each
patient in writing, during the initial patient contact, of the licensee's education, experience, and
credentials related to the alternative medicine practiced by the licensee. The board shall not take
disciplinary action against a licensee solely on the grounds that the licensee practices alternative
medicine.
(b) Nothing in subsection (5)(a) of this section prevents disciplinary action against a
licensee for practicing medicine, practicing as a physician assistant, or practicing as an
anesthesiologist assistant in violation of this article 240.

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