Oklahoma Code § 59-622

Title 59. Professions And Occupations: License required - Submission to jurisdiction of courts -
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Employing hospitals not regarded as practitioners.
A.  1.  Except as otherwise provided by this section, it shall
be unlawful for any person to practice as an osteopathic physician
and surgeon in this state, without a license to do so, issued by the
State Board of Osteopathic Examiners; provided, that any license or
certificate issued under the laws of this state, authorizing its
holder to practice osteopathic medicine, shall remain in full force
and effect.  Persons who hold themselves out as osteopathic
physicians in this state without a license issued by the State Board
of Osteopathic Examiners shall submit themselves to the jurisdiction
of the State Board of Osteopathic Examiners.
2.  Osteopathic physicians engaged in postgraduate training
shall be licensed.  Osteopathic physicians engaged in the internship
or PGY-1 year shall be issued a resident training license and all
other postgraduate students shall be issued an advanced resident
training license.
B.  1.  A person within or outside of this state who performs
through electronic communications diagnostic or treatment services
or other medical services within the scope of practice of an
osteopathic physician and surgeon for any patient whose condition is
being diagnosed or treated within this state shall be licensed in
this state, pursuant to the provisions of the Oklahoma Osteopathic
Medicine Act.  However, in such cases, a nonresident osteopathic
physician who, while located outside this state, consults on an
irregular basis with a physician who is located in this state is not
required to be licensed in this state.
2.  Any osteopathic physician who engages in the practice of
medicine or the prescription of drugs, devices, or treatments via
electronic means may do so only in the context of an appropriate
physician-patient relationship wherein a proper patient record is
maintained including, at the minimum, a current history and
physical.
3.  Any commissioned medical officer of the Armed Forces of the
United States or medical officer of the United States Public Health
Service or the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, in the
discharge of official duties whose practice is confined entirely
within federally controlled facilities, who is fully licensed to
practice osteopathic medicine and surgery in one or more
jurisdictions of the United States shall not be required to be
licensed in this state pursuant to the Oklahoma Osteopathic Medicine
Act, unless the person already holds an osteopathic medical license
in this state pursuant to the Oklahoma Osteopathic Medicine Act.  In
such case, the medical officer shall be subject to the Oklahoma
Osteopathic Medicine Act.

4.  A person who performs any of the functions covered by this
subsection submits themselves to the jurisdiction of the courts of
this state for the purposes of any cause of action resulting from
the functions performed.
C.  A hospital, as defined in Section 1-701 of Title 63 of the
Oklahoma Statutes, or a related institution which has the principal
purpose or function of providing hospital or medical care including,
but not limited to, any corporation, association, trust, or other
organization organized and operated for such purpose, may employ one
or more persons who are duly licensed to practice osteopathic
medicine in this state without being regarded as itself practicing
osteopathic medicine within the meaning and provisions of this
section.  The employment by the hospital or related institution of
any person who is duly licensed shall not, in and of itself, be
considered as an act of unprofessional conduct by the person so
employed.  Nothing provided herein shall eliminate, limit or
restrict the liability for any act or failure to act of any
hospital, any hospital’s employees or persons duly licensed to
practice osteopathic medicine.
D.  Nothing in the Oklahoma Osteopathic Medicine Act shall be
construed as to require an osteopathic physician to secure an
Osteopathic Continuous Certification (OCC) as a condition of
licensure, reimbursement, employment or admitting privileges at a
hospital in this state.  For the purposes of this subsection,
“Osteopathic Continuous Certification (OCC)” shall mean a continuing
education program measuring core competencies in the practice of
medicine and surgery and approved by a nationally-recognized
accrediting organization.
E.  An osteopathic physician licensed under the Oklahoma
Osteopathic Medicine Act may not hold himself or herself out as a
board-certified specialist unless the osteopathic physician has
successfully completed the requirements for certification by the
American Osteopathic Association, the American Board of Medical
Specialties, or the American Association of Physician Specialists.
However, an osteopathic physician may indicate the services offered
and may state that his or her practice is limited to one or more
types of services when this statement accurately reflects the scope
of practice of the osteopathic physician.
Added by Laws 1921, c. 30, p. 41, § 2.  Amended by Laws 1983, c.
152, § 2, emerg. eff. May 26, 1983; Laws 1993, c. 230, § 3, eff.
July 1, 1993; Laws 1996, c. 147, § 2, eff. Nov. 1, 1996; Laws 2001,
c. 16, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2001; Laws 2009, c. 148, § 5, eff. Nov. 1,
2009; Laws 2010, c. 67, § 3, emerg. eff. April 9, 2010; Laws 2014,
c. 83, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2014; Laws 2016, c. 40, § 2, eff. Nov. 1,
2016; Laws 2025, c. 168, § 2, emerg. eff. May 12, 2025.

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