Nev. Admin. Code § 641.229 - Impairment of licensee or certificate holder; limitation on contact with current or former patient or client
1. A psychologist
shall not begin or continue a professional relationship with a patient or
client if the psychologist is impaired, or has received notification from the
Board that the Board reasonably suspects him or her to be impaired, because of
mental, emotional, physiological, pharmacological or substance abuse problems.
If such a problem develops during the course of a professional relationship,
the psychologist shall:
(a) Terminate the
relationship;
(b) Notify the
patient or client in writing of the termination; and
(c) Assist the patient or client in obtaining
services from another professional.
2. A psychologist shall not begin or continue
a professional relationship with a patient or client if the objectivity or
competency of the psychologist is impaired, or if the psychologist has received
notification from the Board that the Board reasonably suspects his or her
objectivity or competency to be impaired, because the psychologist has or had a
family, social, sexual, emotional, financial, supervisory, political,
administrative or legal relationship with the patient or client or a person
associated with or related to the patient or client.
3. If a psychologist has rendered
professional services to a person, the psychologist shall not:
(a) Engage in any verbal or physical behavior
with the person which is sexually seductive, demeaning or harassing;
(b) Engage in sexual contact with the person;
or
(c) Enter into a financial or
other potentially exploitive relationship with the person, for at least 2 years
after the termination of the professional relationship, or for an indefinite
time if the person is clearly vulnerable to exploitive influence by the
psychologist because of an emotional or cognitive disorder.
Notes
NRS 641.100
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
1. A psychologist shall not begin or continue a professional relationship with a patient or client if the psychologist is impaired, or has received notification from the Board that the Board reasonably suspects him or her to be impaired, because of mental, emotional, physiological, pharmacological or substance abuse problems. If such a problem develops during the course of a professional relationship, the psychologist shall:
(a) Terminate the relationship;
(b) Notify the patient or client in writing of the termination; and
(c) Assist the patient or client in obtaining services from another professional.
2. A psychologist shall not begin or continue a professional relationship with a patient or client if the objectivity or competency of the psychologist is impaired, or if the psychologist has received notification from the Board that the Board reasonably suspects his or her objectivity or competency to be impaired, because the psychologist has or had a family, social, sexual, emotional, financial, supervisory, political, administrative or legal relationship with the patient or client or a person associated with or related to the patient or client.
3. If a psychologist has rendered professional services to a person, the psychologist shall not:
(a) Engage in any verbal or physical behavior with the person which is sexually seductive, demeaning or harassing;
(b) Engage in sexual contact with the person; or
(c) Enter into a financial or other potentially exploitive relationship with the person, for at least 2 years after the termination of the professional relationship, or for an indefinite time if the person is clearly vulnerable to exploitive influence by the psychologist because of an emotional or cognitive disorder.
Notes
NRS 641.100