Utah Code § 26B-2-240

Department authorized to grant, deny, or revoke clearance -- Department may
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limit direct patient access -- Clearance.
(1) The definitions in Section 26B-2-238 apply to this section.
(2)
(a) As provided in this section, the department may grant, deny, or revoke certification for direct
patient access for an individual, including a covered individual.
(b) The department may limit the circumstances under which a covered individual granted
certification for direct patient access may have direct patient access, based on the
relationship factors under Subsection (4) and other mitigating factors related to patient and
resident protection.
(c) The department shall determine whether to grant certification for direct patient access for
each applicant for whom it receives:
(i) the personal identification information specified by the department under Subsection (4)(b);
and
(ii) any fees established by the department under Subsection (9).
(d) The department shall:
(i) establish a procedure for obtaining and evaluating relevant information concerning covered
individuals, including fingerprinting the applicant and submitting the prints to the Criminal
Investigations and Technical Services Division of the Department of Public Safety for
checking against applicable state, regional, and national criminal records files; and
(ii) require that a certification for direct patient access include a fingerprint-based criminal
history background check in the databases described under Subsection (3)(a), including the
inclusion of the individual's fingerprints in a rap back system.

(3) The department may review the following sources to determine whether an individual should be
granted or retain certification for direct patient access, which may include:
(a) Department of Public Safety arrest, conviction, and disposition records described in Title 53,
Chapter 10, Criminal Investigations and Technical Services Act, including information in state,
regional, and national records files;
(b) juvenile court arrest, adjudication, and disposition records, as allowed under Section
78A-6-209;
(c) federal criminal background databases available to the state;
(d) the Division of Child and Family Services Licensing Information System described in Section
80-2-1002;
(e) child abuse or neglect findings described in Section 80-3-404 or 80-3-504;
(f) the Division of Aging and Adult Services vulnerable adult abuse, neglect, or exploitation
database described in Section 26B-6-210;
(g) registries of nurse aids described in 42 C.F.R. Sec. 483.156;
(h) licensing and certification records of individuals licensed or certified by the Division of
Professional Licensing under Title 58, Occupations and Professions; and
(i) the List of Excluded Individuals and Entities database maintained by the United States
Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Inspector General.
(4) The department shall adopt rules that:
(a) specify the criteria the department will use to determine whether an individual is granted or
retains certification for direct patient access:
(i) based on an initial evaluation and ongoing review of information under Subsection (3); and
(ii) including consideration of the relationship the following may have to patient and resident
protection:
(A) warrants for arrest;
(B) arrests;
(C) convictions, including pleas in abeyance;
(D) pending diversion agreements;
(E) adjudications by a juvenile court under Section 80-6-701 if the individual is over 28 years
old and has been convicted, has pleaded no contest, or is subject to a plea in abeyance or
diversion agreement for a felony or misdemeanor, or the individual is under 28 years old;
and
(F) any other findings under Subsection (3); and
(b) specify the personal identification information that must be submitted by an individual or
covered body with an application for certification for direct patient access, including:
(i) the applicant's social security number; and
(ii) fingerprints.
(5) For purposes of Subsection (4)(a), the department shall classify a crime committed in another
state according to the closest matching crime under Utah law, regardless of how the crime is
classified in the state where the crime was committed.
(6) The Department of Public Safety, the Administrative Office of the Courts, the Division of
Professional Licensing, and any other state agency or political subdivision of the state:
(a) shall allow the department to review the information the department may review under
Subsection (3); and
(b) except for the Department of Public Safety, may not charge the department for access to the
information.

(7) The department shall adopt measures to protect the security of the information it reviews under
Subsection (3) and strictly limit access to the information to department employees responsible
for processing an application for certification for direct patient access.
(8) The department may disclose personal identification information specified under Subsection
(4)(b) to other divisions and offices within the department to verify that the subject of the
information is not identified as a perpetrator or offender in the information sources described in
Subsections (3)(d) through (f).
(9) The department may establish fees, in accordance with Section 63J-1-504, for an application
for certification for direct patient access, which may include:
(a) the cost of obtaining and reviewing information under Subsection (3);
(b) a portion of the cost of creating and maintaining the Direct Access Clearance System
database under Section 26B-2-241; and
(c) other department costs related to the processing of the application and the ongoing review of
information pursuant to Subsection (4)(a) to determine whether certification for direct patient
access should be retained.

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