321.255 Scope of practice -- Allied animal health professional equine dental
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/ky/321-255A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
provider.
(1)The services provided by allied animal health professional licensees are considered
the practice of veterinary medicine that an AAHP licensee may provide to the
public through authorization by the General Assembly and within strict limitations
on the scope of practice for each allowable license type as established in KRS
321.251(2).
(2)For a licensed AAHP-equine dental provider, the scope of practice is limited to the
following:
(a)A licensed AAHP-equine dental provider may not perform equine dentistry
unless the provider holds an AAHP license as an equine dental provider from
the board;
(b)A licensed AAHP-equine dental provider shall work under the indirect
supervision of a veterinarian;
(c)A licensed AAHP-equine dental provider may perform only the following
equine dental procedures in equine species:
1. Removing sharp enamel dental points;
2. Removing small dental overgrowths;
3. Rostral profiling of the first cheek teeth;
4. Reducing incisors;
5. Extracting loose, deciduous teeth;
6. Removing supragingival calculus;
7. Extracting loose, mobile, or diseased teeth or dental fragments with
minimal periodontal attachments by hand and without the use of an
elevator; and
8. Removing erupted, nondisplaced wolf teeth;
(d)Paragraph
(b)of this subsection shall not be construed to prohibit a licensed
veterinary technician employed by a veterinarian who is not a licensed
AAHP-equine dental provider from performing the equine dental procedures
described in paragraph
(c)of this subsection if the licensed veterinary
technician is under the direct supervision of a veterinarian;
(e)A copy of the dental chart of an equine animal shall be left with the person
who authorizes an equine dental procedure and be made available to the
veterinarian holding the VCPR with the client within an appropriate
timeframe according to the condition, but no more than three
(3)business
days after services are provided; and
(f)Dispensing or prescribing any medication or drug associated with any equine
dental procedure remains solely the domain of the veterinarian holding a valid
VCPR with the client.