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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR SPAC
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
02/27/07
03/12/07 HB
SHORT TITLE
OPTOMETRY EXCLUSIONS & CERTIFICATION
SB
CS/367/aSJC/aSFl#1/a
SFl#2
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY07
FY08
NFI
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
New Mexico Medical Board (NMMB)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of SFl Amendment #2
The Senate Floor Amendment #2 adds language restricting scalpel use to the skin surrounding
the eye.
Synopsis of SFl Amendment #1
The Senate Floor Amendment #1 adds an emergency clause that the Act takes effect immediately
upon being signed by the Governor. This will help bring current optometry practice in line with
State law as soon as possible.
Synopsis of SJC Amendment
The Senate Judiciary Committee Amendment adds language to exclude “surgery or injections in
the treatment of eye diseases" from the definition of the “practice of optometry".
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The Committee may wish to consider if the proposed exclusion includes cosmetic surgery, which
is not necessarily classified within “eye diseases".
pg_0002
CS/Senate Bill 367/aSJC/aSFL#1/aSF#2– Page
2
Synopsis of Original Bill
The Senate Public Affairs Committee substitute for Senate Bill 367 amends Section 61-2-2
NMSA 1978 by expanding the practice of optometry to include the use of the following types of
in-office minor surgical procedures:
the non-laser removal, destruction or drainage of superficial eyelid lesions and
conjunctival cysts;
the removal of non-perforating foreign bodies from the cornea, conjunctiva and eyelid;
the non-laser corneal debridement, culture, scrape or anterior puncture, not including
removal of pterygium, corneal biopsy or removal of corneal neoplasias;
the removal of eyelashes; and,
the probing, dilation, irrigation or closure of the tear drainage structures of the eyelid.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The Optometry Board may need to increase the operational budget, and therefore increase
licensing fees, in order to provide the oversight required under the increased scope of practice;
however, evidence suggests the procedures as defined in the substitute have been adopted by the
Board for some time now and are current practice among optometrists.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The SPAC substitute codifies into statute a set of minor surgical procedures optometrists in the
New Mexico have been performing for several years. According to the NM Medical Board, the
state statute specifically excludes surgery from the definition of the practice of optometry. The
Optometry Board reports that it has not received any complaints related to these procedures.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
Optometrists provide most primary vision care. They examine people’s eyes to diagnose vision
problems and eye diseases, and they test patients’ visual acuity, depth and color perception, and
the ability to focus and coordinate the eyes. Optometrists prescribe eyeglasses and contact lenses
and provide vision therapy and low-vision rehabilitation. Optometrists analyze test results and
develop a treatment plan. They administer drugs to patients to aid in the diagnosis of vision
problems and prescribe drugs to treat some eye diseases. Optometrists often provide preoperative
and postoperative care to cataract patients, as well as to patients who have had laser vision
correction or other eye surgery. They also diagnose conditions caused by systemic diseases such
as diabetes and high blood pressure, referring patients to other health practitioners as needed.
Ophthalmologists are physicians who perform eye surgery, as well as diagnose and treat eye
diseases and injuries. Like optometrists, they also examine eyes and prescribe eyeglasses and
contact lenses.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
State law allows optometrists who are certified by the Board to use oral or topical
pharmaceutical agents, to use the title of “Optometric Physician" and to advertise under the
“physician" and “physician-eye" headings of the yellow pages.
pg_0003
CS/Senate Bill 367/aSJC/aSFL#1/aSF#2– Page
3
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
Relates to SB 359; providing an avenue for a more objective review process for assessing
proposed changes in a health professions scope of practice.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
Current law provides for the administering and prescribing of certain oral and topical drugs by
optometrists; however, there is no provision to allow the administration of epinephrine by
injection for the treatment of anaphylactic shock.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
Optometrists provide most primary vision care. Currently in the US there is an ongoing push by
optometrists to increase the scope of their practice. The American Academy of Ophthalmology
has been resisting these efforts. The American Medical Association’s recent “Scope of Practice
Study" and “Scope of Practice Partnership" is designed to provide backing to AMA members
who have scope of practice battles in their state. According to the AMA, the members of the
Partnership plan to fund research that helps refute key arguments allied health professionals use
to advance their measures in state legislatures. Funding will also be used to “help medical
associations fight expansions in non-medical scope of practice legislation in states where such
bills appear likely to advance." Currently the Partnership is comprised of six state medical
associations and six specialty groups including the American Academy of Ophthalmology.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Actual practice will not conform to state law. The optometrists’ scope of practice established by
the Board of Optometry will remain in effect within board policy, rather than by statute.
POSSIBLE QUESTIONS
Optometrists serve patients in nearly 6,500 communities across the country, and in more than
3,500 of these communities they are the only eye doctors. How many communities in New
Mexico are served only by Optometrists.
AHO/nt