Rhode Island 2026 Regular Session

Rhode Island House Bill H7935

Introduced
2/27/26  

Caption

Increases continuing education requirements for physician assistants, removes restrictions of PAs to render charitable care and aid for school and youth programs or cardiac arrest and removes restrictive covenants as to ownership by a PA.

Impact

The amendments proposed by H7935 are expected to have a profound impact on the scope of practice for physician assistants in Rhode Island. By lifting the restrictions on charitable care, the bill encourages more physician assistants to partake in community service, potentially increasing healthcare access for underprivileged populations. Furthermore, by amending the laws regarding collaboration with physicians, it clarifies the responsibilities of physician assistants in relation to patient care and safety during youth sports. This change aims to streamline practices around handling concussions and other emergency care scenarios by allowing physician assistants to act without delay.

Summary

House Bill H7935 seeks to amend provisions in Rhode Island's General Laws pertaining to physician assistants. The bill aims to increase the continuing medical education requirement for physician assistants from twenty-five hours to fifty hours every two years. It also facilitates the ability of physician assistants to participate in charitable care without heightening liability concerns by requiring liability coverage. Importantly, the bill allows physician assistants to provide assistance under two significant laws: the School and Youth Programs Concussion Act and the Sudden Cardiac Arrest Prevention Act. Moreover, it addresses the enforceability of restrictive covenants placed on physician assistants in their professional agreements.

Contention

While the bill has garnered support among various health care advocates for its initiatives to enhance the practice of physician assistants, there remains some contention regarding the removal of restrictive covenants. Opponents argue that eliminating these restrictions could lead to workforce instability, as physician assistants may leave practices for better opportunities without any binding agreements. Additionally, there is debate about whether increasing continuing education requirements might create barriers for current practitioners who may struggle to meet the new standards.

Companion Bills

No companion bills found.

Previously Filed As

RI S0703

Alters a PA’s continuing education requirements, ability to provide charitable care, and authority to clear students to return to sports after health-concern related removal and protect PA’s from certain restrictive covenants.

RI S0701

Allows advanced practice registered nurses, physician assistants, and physicians who are and are not licensed in Rhode Island to provide telemedicine services to patients who are in the state when those services are rendered.

RI S0695

Recognizes the program run by the Rhode Island Medical Society or comparable program for physicians, physician assistants, dentists, and podiatrists, to address burnout, substance abuse, and mental and physical health issues.

RI H6036

Recognizes the program run by the Rhode Island Medical Society or comparable program for physicians, physician assistants, dentists, and podiatrists, to address burnout, substance abuse, and mental and physical health issues.

RI S0062

Removes the requirement that families consent to, and cooperate with the department of human services in establishing paternity and enforcing child and medical support orders as a condition of eligibility for child care assistance.

RI H5197

Removes the requirement that families consent to, and cooperate with the department of human services in establishing paternity and enforcing child and medical support orders as a condition of eligibility for child care assistance.

RI H5351

Mandates cosmetic medical procedures be performed by a physician, PA, APRN, or delegated to a qualified non-physician, non-PA or non-APRN under the supervision of a physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice registered nurse.

RI S0976

Mandates cosmetic medical procedures be performed by a physician, PA, APRN, or delegated to a qualified non-physician, non-PA or non-APRN under the supervision of a physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice registered nurse.

RI S0448

Removes funding requirement from department of elementary and secondary education.

RI H5852

Expands the existing law regarding collaborative practice agreements between pharmacists and physicians to allow other healthcare providers to enter into such agreements and removes the definition of “collaborative practice committee.”

Similar Bills

CA AB2398

Graduate medical education capacity: report.

NV AB170

Providing for the licensure of associate physicians and associate osteopathic physicians. (BDR 54-840)

GA HB1273

Professions and businesses; authorize physician assistants to receive certain delegated authorities from podiatric physicians

LA HB1143

Provides relative to physician assistants

MO HB2749

Modifies provisions relating to collaborative practice arrangements between physicians and physician assistants

NM HB267

Physician Assistants Supervising Others

MO HB3039

Modifies provisions relating to the prescriptive authority of physician assistants

DE HB325

An Act To Amend The Delaware Code Relating To Physician Associates And Physician Assistants.