TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
Titles of Regulations: 18VAC115-20. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Professional Counseling (amending 18VAC115-20-10, 18VAC115-20-40
through 18VAC115-20-70, 18VAC115-20-130).
18VAC115-50. Regulations Governing the Practice of Marriage
and Family Therapy (amending 18VAC115-50-10, 18VAC115-50-20,
18VAC115-50-30 through 18VAC115-50-96, 18VAC115-50-100, 18VAC115-50-110,
18VAC115-50-120).
18VAC115-60. Regulations Governing the Practice of Licensed
Substance Abuse Treatment Practitioners (amending 18VAC115-60-10, 18VAC115-60-20,
18VAC115-60-40 through 18VAC115-60-90, 18VAC115-60-110, 18VAC115-60-115,
18VAC115-60-116, 18VAC115-60-120, 18VAC115-60-130, 18VAC115-60-140; repealing
18VAC115-60-55).
Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2400 of the Code of
Virginia.
Effective Date: August 24, 2016.
Agency Contact: Jaime Hoyle, Executive Director, Board
of Counseling, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
(804) 367-4406, FAX (804) 527-4435, or email jaime.hoyle@dhp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments (i) add the Council for Accreditation of
Counseling and Related Educational Programs and the Council on Rehabilitation
Education as groups that can approve educational programs under the
professional counselor licensure program; (ii) eliminate the requirement that a
transcript be included when applying for licensure if one was already submitted
for approval of residency; (iii) modify experience requirements in 18VAC115-50
and 18VAC115-60 for individuals seeking licensure by endorsement so that they
only have to have clinical practice 24 of the 60 months immediately before
licensure application, instead of five of the last six years as currently
required; (iv) allow the use of real-time visual contact technology (e.g.,
Skype or other like services) to meet face-to-face supervision requirements
during residency; (v) allow 20 hours of supervision obtained during an
internship to count toward the 200 hours of face-to-face supervision required
during residency so long as the internship supervision was under a licensed professional
counselor or, in the case of interns working toward licensure as a marriage and
family therapist, a licensed professional counselor or a licensed marriage and
family therapist; (vi) require that residencies be completed in not less than
21 months and not more than four years; (vii) add local governments to the
groups whose continuing education programs are approved by the board to count
toward continuing education requirements; (viii) disallow certain professionals
from providing supervision for residencies because the board does not have
disciplinary or regulatory authority over these groups; and (ix) require
applicants for licensure to provide a current report from the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services National Practitioner Data Bank, which contains
disciplinary and malpractice history.
Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: A
summary of comments made by the public and the agency's response may be
obtained from the promulgating agency or viewed at the office of the Registrar
of Regulations.
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC115-20-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia:
"Appraisal activities"
"Board"
"Counseling"
"Counseling treatment intervention"
"Professional counselor"
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Ancillary counseling services" means activities
such as case management, recordkeeping, referral, and coordination of services.
"Applicant" means any individual who has submitted
an official application and paid the application fee for licensure as a
professional counselor.
"CACREP" means the Council for Accreditation of
Counseling and Related Educational Programs.
"Candidate for licensure" means a person who has
satisfactorily completed all educational and experience requirements for
licensure and has been deemed eligible by the board to sit for its
examinations.
"Clinical counseling services" means activities
such as assessment, diagnosis, treatment planning, and treatment
implementation.
"Competency area" means an area in which a person
possesses knowledge and skill and the ability to apply them in the clinical
setting.
"CORE" means Council on Rehabilitation
Education.
"Exempt setting" means an agency or institution in
which licensure is not required to engage in the practice of counseling
according to the conditions set forth in § 54.1-3501 of the Code of
Virginia.
"Face-to-face" means the in-person delivery of
clinical counseling services for a client.
"Group supervision" means the process of clinical
supervision of no more than six persons in a group setting provided by a
qualified supervisor.
"Internship" means a formal academic course from a
regionally accredited college or university in which supervised, practical
experience is obtained in a clinical setting in the application of counseling
principles, methods, and techniques.
"Jurisdiction" means a state, territory, district,
province, or country that has granted a professional certificate or license to
practice a profession, use a professional title, or hold oneself out as a
practitioner of that profession.
"Nonexempt setting" means a setting that does not
meet the conditions of exemption from the requirements of licensure to engage
in the practice of counseling as set forth in § 54.1-3501 of the Code of
Virginia.
"Regional accrediting agency" means one of the
regional accreditation agencies recognized by the United States U.S.
Secretary of Education responsible for accrediting senior postsecondary
institutions.
"Residency" means a post-graduate postgraduate,
supervised, clinical experience registered with the board.
"Resident" means an individual who has submitted a
supervisory contract and has received board approval to provide clinical
services in professional counseling under supervision.
"Supervision" means the ongoing process performed
by a supervisor who monitors the performance of the person supervised and
provides regular, documented individual or group consultation, guidance, and
instruction that is specific to the clinical counseling services being
performed with respect to the clinical skills and competencies of the
person supervised.
Part II
Requirements for Licensure
18VAC115-20-40. Prerequisites for licensure by examination.
Every applicant for licensure examination by the board shall:
1. Meet the degree program requirements prescribed in
18VAC115-20-49, the course work requirements prescribed in 18VAC115-20-51, and
the experience requirements prescribed in 18VAC115-20-52; and
2. Pass the licensure examination specified by the board;
3. Submit the following to the board:
a. A completed application;
b. Official transcripts documenting the applicant's completion
of the degree program and coursework requirements prescribed in 18VAC115-20-49
and 18VAC115-20-51. Transcripts previously submitted for registration of
supervision do not have to be resubmitted unless additional coursework was
subsequently obtained;
c. Verification of Supervision forms documenting fulfillment
of the residency requirements of 18VAC115-20-52 and copies of all required
evaluation forms, including verification of current licensure of the supervisor
if any portion of the residency occurred in another jurisdiction;
d. Verification of any other mental health or health
professional license or certificate ever held in another jurisdiction; and
e. The application processing and initial licensure fee as
prescribed in 18VAC115-20-20.; and
f. A current report from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); and
3. 4. Have no unresolved disciplinary action
against a mental health or health professional license or certificate held in
Virginia or in another jurisdiction. The board will consider history of
disciplinary action on a case-by-case basis.
18VAC115-20-45. Prerequisites for licensure by endorsement.
A. Every applicant for licensure by endorsement shall hold or
have held a professional counselor license in another jurisdiction of the
United States and shall submit the following:
1. A completed application;
2. The application processing fee and initial licensure fee as
prescribed in 18VAC115-20-20;
3. Verification of all mental health or health professional
licenses or certificates ever held in any other jurisdiction. In order to
qualify for endorsement the applicant shall have no unresolved action against a
license or certificate. The board will consider history of disciplinary action
on a case-by-case basis;
4. Documentation of having completed education and experience
requirements as specified in subsection B of this section;
5. Verification of a passing score on an examination required
for counseling licensure in the jurisdiction in which licensure was obtained; and
6. A current report from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); and
6. 7. An affidavit of having read and understood
the regulations and laws governing the practice of professional counseling in
Virginia.
B. Every applicant for licensure by endorsement shall meet
one of the following:
1. Educational requirements consistent with those specified in
18VAC115-20-49 and 18VAC115-20-51 and experience requirements consistent with
those specified in 18VAC115-20-52; or
2. If an applicant does not have educational and experience
credentials consistent with those required by this chapter, he shall provide:
a. Documentation of education and supervised experience that
met the requirements of the jurisdiction in which he was initially licensed as
verified by an official transcript and a certified copy of the original
application materials; and
b. Evidence of post-licensure clinical practice in counseling,
as defined in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of Virginia, for 24 of the last 60
months immediately preceding his licensure application in Virginia. Clinical
practice shall mean the rendering of direct clinical counseling services or
clinical supervision of counseling services.; or
3. In lieu of transcripts verifying education and
documentation verifying supervised experience, the board may accept
verification from the credentials registry of the American Association of State
Counseling Boards or any other board-recognized entity.
18VAC115-20-49. Degree program requirements.
A. The applicant shall have completed a graduate
degree from a program that prepares individuals to practice counseling and
counseling treatment intervention, as defined in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia, which is offered by a college or university accredited by a regional
accrediting agency and which meets the following criteria:
1. There must be a sequence of academic study with the expressed
intent to prepare counselors as documented by the institution;
2. There must be an identifiable counselor training faculty
and an identifiable body of students who complete that sequence of academic
study; and
3. The academic unit must have clear authority and primary
responsibility for the core and specialty areas.
B. Programs that are approved by CACREP or CORE are
recognized as meeting the requirements of subsection A of this section.
18VAC115-20-51. Coursework requirements.
A. The applicant shall have successfully completed 60
semester hours or 90 quarter hours of graduate study in the following core
coursework with a minimum of three semester hours or 4.0 quarter hours in each
of subdivisions 1 through 12 of this subsection:
1. Professional counseling identity, function, and ethics;
2. Theories of counseling and psychotherapy;
3. Counseling and psychotherapy techniques;
4. Human growth and development;
5. Group counseling and psychotherapy theories and techniques;
6. Career counseling and development theories and techniques;
7. Appraisal, evaluation, and diagnostic procedures;
8. Abnormal behavior and psychopathology;
9. Multicultural counseling theories and techniques;
10. Research;
11. Diagnosis and treatment of addictive disorders;
12. Marriage and family systems theory; and
13. Supervised internship of at least 600 hours to include 240
hours of face-to-face client contact. [ Internship Only
internship ] hours [ shall not begin until
earned after ] completion of 30 [ graduate ] semester
hours [ toward the graduate degree may be counted
towards residency hours ].
B. If 60 graduate hours in counseling were completed prior to
April 12, 2000, the board may accept those hours if they meet the regulations
in effect at the time the 60 hours were completed.
18VAC115-20-52. Residency requirements.
A. Registration. Applicants who render counseling services
shall:
1. With their supervisor, register their supervisory contract
on the appropriate forms for board approval before starting to practice under
supervision;
2. Have submitted an official transcript documenting a
graduate degree as specified in 18VAC115-20-49 to include completion of the
coursework and internship requirement specified in 18VAC115-20-51; and
3. Pay the registration fee.
B. Residency requirements.
1. The applicant for licensure shall have completed a
3,400-hour supervised residency in the role of a professional counselor working
with various populations, clinical problems, and theoretical approaches in the
following areas:
a. Assessment and diagnosis using psychotherapy techniques;
b. Appraisal, evaluation, and diagnostic procedures;
c. Treatment planning and implementation;
d. Case management and recordkeeping;
e. Professional counselor identity and function; and
f. Professional ethics and standards of practice.
2. The residency shall include a minimum of 200 hours of face-to-face
in-person supervision between supervisor and resident in the
consultation and review of clinical counseling services provided by the
resident. Supervision shall occur at a minimum of one hour and a maximum of
four hours per 40 hours of work experience during the period of the residency.
For the purpose of meeting the 200-hour supervision requirement, face-to-face
in-person may include the use of secured technology that maintains
client confidentiality and provides real-time, visual contact between the
supervisor and the resident. Up to 20 hours of the supervision received
during the supervised internship may be counted towards the 200 hours of
in-person supervision if the supervision was provided by a licensed
professional counselor.
3. No more than half of the 200 hours may be satisfied with
group supervision. One hour of group supervision will be deemed equivalent to
one hour of individual supervision.
4. Supervision that is not concurrent with a residency will
not be accepted, nor will residency hours be accrued in the absence of approved
supervision.
5. The residency shall include at least 2,000 hours of
face-to-face client contact in providing clinical counseling services. The
remaining hours may be spent in the performance of ancillary counseling
services.
6. A graduate-level internship in excess of 600 hours, which
was completed in a program that meets the requirements set forth in
18VAC115-20-49, may count for up to an additional 300 hours towards the
requirements of a residency.
7. The residency shall be completed in not less than
[ 18 21 ] months or more than four years.
Residents who began a residency before [ (insert effective date
of the regulation) August 24, 2016, ] shall complete the
residency by [ (insert four years after the effective date)
August 24, 2020 ]. An individual who does not complete the
residency after four years shall submit evidence to the board showing why the
supervised experience should be allowed to continue.
8. The board may consider special requests in the event
that the regulations create an undue burden in regard to geography or
disability that limits the resident's access to qualified supervision.
8. 9. Residents may not call themselves
professional counselors, directly bill for services rendered, or in any way
represent themselves as independent, autonomous practitioners or professional
counselors. During the residency, residents shall use their names and the
initials of their degree, and the title "Resident in Counseling" in
all written communications. Clients shall be informed in writing of the
resident's status and the supervisor's name, professional address, and phone
number.
9. 10. Residents shall not engage in practice
under supervision in any areas for which they have not had appropriate
education.
11. Residency hours approved by the licensing board in
another [ U.S. United States ] jurisdiction
that meet the requirements of this section shall be accepted.
C. Supervisory qualifications. A person who provides
supervision for a resident in professional counseling shall:
1. Document two years of post-licensure clinical experience;
2. Have received professional training in supervision,
consisting of three credit hours or 4.0 quarter hours in graduate-level
coursework in supervision or at least 20 hours of continuing education in
supervision offered by a provider approved under 18VAC115-20-106; and
3. Shall hold an active, unrestricted license as a
professional counselor, or a marriage and family therapist,
substance abuse treatment practitioner, school psychologist, clinical
psychologist, clinical social worker, or psychiatrist in the jurisdiction
where the supervision is being provided. At least 100 hours of the supervision
shall be rendered by a licensed professional counselor. [ Supervisors
who are substance abuse treatment practitioners, school psychologists, clinical
psychologists, clinical social workers, or psychiatrists and have been approved
to provide supervision may continue to do so until August 24, 2017. ]
D. Supervisory responsibilities.
1. Supervision by any individual whose relationship to the
resident compromises the objectivity of the supervisor is prohibited.
2. The supervisor of a resident shall assume full
responsibility for the clinical activities of that resident specified within
the supervisory contract for the duration of the residency.
3. The supervisor shall complete evaluation forms to be given
to the resident at the end of each three-month period.
4. The supervisor shall report the total hours of residency
and shall evaluate the applicant's competency in the six areas stated in
subdivision B 1 of this section.
5. The supervisor shall provide supervision as defined in
18VAC115-20-10.
Part III
Examinations
18VAC115-20-70. General examination requirements; schedules;
time limits.
A. Every applicant for initial licensure by examination by
the board as a professional counselor shall pass a written examination as
prescribed by the board.
B. Every applicant for licensure by endorsement shall have
passed a licensure examination in the jurisdiction in which licensure was
obtained.
C. A candidate approved to sit for the examination shall take
pass the examination within two years from the date of such initial
approval. If the candidate has not taken passed the examination
by the end of the two-year period here prescribed:
1. The initial approval to sit for the examination shall then
become invalid; and
2. In order to be considered for the examination later, the
The applicant shall file a new application with the board, meet the
requirements in effect at that time, and provide evidence of why the board
should approve the reapplication for examination. If approved by the board, the
applicant shall pass the examination within two years of such approval. If the
examination is not passed within the additional two-year period, a new
application will not be accepted.
D. The board shall establish a passing score on the written
examination.
E. A candidate for examination or an applicant shall not
provide clinical counseling services unless he is under supervision approved by
the board.
Part V
Standards of Practice; Unprofessional Conduct; Disciplinary Actions;
Reinstatement
18VAC115-20-130. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public health, safety, and welfare
and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in determining
the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose activities are
regulated by the board. Regardless of the delivery method, whether in person,
by phone, or electronically, these standards shall apply to the practice of
counseling.
B. Persons licensed or registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare;
2. Practice only within the boundaries of their competence,
based on their education, training, supervised experience, and appropriate
professional experience and represent their education, training, and experience
accurately to clients;
3. Stay abreast of new counseling information, concepts,
applications, and practices that are necessary to providing appropriate,
effective professional services;
4. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as necessary
and appropriate for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes;
5. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate a
counseling relationship when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting
from the relationship. Document the assistance provided in making appropriate
arrangements for the continuation of treatment for clients, when necessary,
following termination of a counseling relationship;
6. Make appropriate arrangements for continuation of services,
when necessary, during interruptions such as vacations, unavailability,
relocation, illness, and disability;
7. Disclose to clients all experimental methods of treatment
and inform clients of the risks and benefits of any such treatment. Ensure that
the welfare of the clients is in no way compromised in any experimentation or
research involving those clients;
8. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates, or other
forms of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services;
9. Inform clients of the purposes, goals, techniques, procedures,
limitations, potential risks, and benefits of services to be performed; the
limitations of confidentiality; and other pertinent information when counseling
is initiated and throughout the counseling process as necessary. Provide
clients with accurate information regarding the implications of diagnosis, the
intended use of tests and reports, fees, and billing arrangements;
10. Select tests for use with clients that are valid,
reliable, and appropriate and carefully interpret the performance of individuals
not represented in standardized norms;
11. Determine whether a client is receiving services from
another mental health service provider, and if so, refrain from providing
services to the client without having an informed consent discussion with the
client and having been granted communication privileges with the other
professional;
12. Use only in connection with one's practice as a mental
health professional those educational and professional degrees or titles that
have been earned at a college or university accredited by an accrediting agency
recognized by the United States U.S. Department of Education, or
credentials granted by a national certifying agency, and that are counseling in
nature; and
13. Advertise professional services fairly and accurately in a
manner that is not false, misleading, or deceptive.
C. In regard to patient records, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Maintain written or electronic clinical records for each
client to include treatment dates and identifying information to substantiate
diagnosis and treatment plan, client progress, and termination;
2. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees of
the requirements of confidentiality, and provide for the destruction of records
that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client confidentiality;
3. Disclose or release records to others only with the
client's expressed written consent or that of the client's legally authorized
representative in accordance with § 32.1-127.1:03 of the Code of Virginia;
4. Ensure confidentiality in the usage of client records and
clinical materials by obtaining informed consent from the client or the
client's legally authorized representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio
recording, (iii) permitting third party observation, or (iv) using identifiable
client records and clinical materials in teaching, writing, or public
presentations; and
5. Maintain client records for a minimum of five years or as
otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the counseling
relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall be maintained
for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years) or 10
years following termination, whichever comes later;
b. Records that are required by contractual obligation or
federal law to be maintained for a longer period of time; or
c. Records that have been transferred to another mental health
service provider or given to the client or his legally authorized
representative.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Avoid dual relationships with clients that could impair
professional judgment or increase the risk of harm to clients. Examples of such
relationships include, but are not limited to, familial, social, financial,
business, bartering, or close personal relationships with clients. Counselors
shall take appropriate professional precautions when a dual relationship cannot
be avoided, such as informed consent, consultation, supervision, and
documentation to ensure that judgment is not impaired and no exploitation
occurs;
2. Not engage in any type of romantic relationships or sexual
intimacies with clients or those included in a collateral relationship with the
client and not counsel persons with whom they have had a romantic relationship
or sexual intimacy. Counselors shall not engage in romantic relationships or
sexual intimacies with former clients within a minimum of five years after
terminating the counseling relationship. Counselors who engage in such
relationship or intimacy after five years following termination shall have the
responsibility to examine and document thoroughly that such relations do not
have an exploitive nature, based on factors such as duration of counseling,
amount of time since counseling, termination circumstances, client's personal
history and mental status, or adverse impact on the client. A client's consent
to, initiation of, or participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a
counselor does not change the nature of the conduct nor lift the regulatory
prohibition;
3. Not engage in any romantic relationship or sexual intimacy
or establish a counseling or psychotherapeutic relationship with a supervisee
or student. Counselors shall avoid any nonsexual dual relationship with a
supervisee or student in which there is a risk of exploitation or potential
harm to the supervisee or student or the potential for interference with the
supervisor's professional judgment; and
4. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties of
the nature and directions of loyalties and responsibilities involved.
E. Persons licensed by this board shall report to the board
known or suspected violations of the laws and regulations governing the
practice of professional counseling.
F. Persons licensed by the board shall advise their clients
of their right to report to the Department of Health Professions any
information of which the licensee may become aware in his professional capacity
indicating that there is a reasonable probability that a person licensed or
certified as a mental health service provider, as defined in § 54.1-2400.1
of the Code of Virginia, may have engaged in unethical, fraudulent, or
unprofessional conduct as defined by the pertinent licensing statutes and
regulations.
18VAC115-50-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia: (i) "board," (ii) "marriage and family therapy,"
(iii) "marriage and family therapist," and (iv) "practice of
marriage and family therapy."
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Ancillary counseling services" means activities
such as case management, recordkeeping, referral, and coordination of services.
"CACREP" means the Council for Accreditation of
Counseling and Related Education Educational Programs.
"COAMFTE" means the Commission on Accreditation for
Marriage and Family Therapy Education.
"Clinical marriage and family services" means
activities such as assessment, diagnosis, and treatment planning and treatment
implementation for couples and families.
"Face-to-face" means the in-person delivery of
clinical marriage and family services for a client.
"Internship" means a supervised, planned,
practical, advanced experience obtained in the clinical setting,
observing and applying the principles, methods and techniques learned in
training or educational settings formal academic course from a
regionally accredited university in which supervised practical experience is
obtained in a clinical setting in the application of counseling principles,
methods, and techniques.
"Regional accrediting agency" means one of the
regional accreditation agencies recognized by the United States U.S.
Secretary of Education as responsible for accrediting senior post-secondary
institutions and training programs.
"Residency" means a post-internship postgraduate,
supervised clinical experience registered with the board.
"Resident" means an individual who has submitted a
supervisory contract to the board and has received board approval to provide
clinical services in marriage and family therapy under supervision.
"Supervision" means an ongoing process performed by
a supervisor who monitors the performance of the person supervised and provides
regular, documented, individual or group consultation, guidance and instruction
with respect to the clinical skills and competencies of the person or persons
being supervised.
18VAC115-50-20. Fees.
A. The board has established
fees for the following:
|
Registration of supervision
|
$50
|
|
Add or change supervisor
|
$25
|
|
Initial licensure by examination: Processing and initial
licensure
|
$140
|
|
Initial licensure by endorsement: Processing and initial
licensure
|
$140
|
|
Active annual license renewal
|
$105
|
|
Inactive annual license renewal
|
$55
|
|
Penalty for late renewal
|
$35
|
|
Reinstatement of a lapsed license
|
$165
|
|
Verification of license to another jurisdiction
|
$25
|
|
Additional or replacement licenses
|
$5
|
|
Additional or replacement wall certificates
|
$15
|
|
Returned check
|
$35
|
|
Reinstatement following revocation or suspension
|
$500
|
|
One-time reduction for renewal of an active license due
on June 30, 2010
|
$52
|
|
One-time reduction for renewal of an inactive license due
on June 30, 2010
|
$27
|
B. Fees shall be paid to the board or its contractor or
both in appropriate amounts as specified in the application instructions.
All fees are nonrefundable.
C. Examination fees shall be determined and made payable as
determined by the board.
18VAC115-50-30. Application for licensure by examination.
Every applicant for examination for licensure by
examination by the board shall:
1. Meet the education and experience requirements prescribed
in 18VAC115-50-50, 18VAC115-50-55 and 18VAC115-50-60.;
2. Meet the examination requirements prescribed in
18VAC115-50-70;
2. 3. Submit to the board office the following
items:
a. A completed application;
b. The application processing and initial licensure fee
prescribed in 18VAC115-50-20;
c. Documentation, on the appropriate forms, of the successful
completion of the residency requirements of 18VAC115-50-60 along with
documentation of the supervisor's out-of-state license where applicable;
d. Official transcript or transcripts in the original
sealed envelope with the registrar's signature across the sealed envelope flap
submitted from the appropriate institutions of higher education directly to
the applicant, verifying satisfactory completion of the education
requirements set forth in 18VAC115-50-50 and 18VAC115-50-55. Previously
submitted transcripts for registration of supervision do not have to be
resubmitted unless additional coursework was subsequently obtained; and
e. Verification on a board-approved form that any of
any mental health or health out-of-state license, certification, or
registration is in good standing. ever held in another jurisdiction;
and
f. A current report from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); and
4. Have no unresolved disciplinary action against a mental
health or health professional license or certificate held in Virginia or in
another jurisdiction. The board will consider history of disciplinary action on
a case-by-case basis.
18VAC115-50-40. Application for licensure by endorsement.
A. Every applicant for licensure by endorsement shall hold
or have held a marriage and family license in another jurisdiction in the
United States and shall submit:
1. A completed application;
2. The application processing and initial licensure fee
prescribed in 18VAC115-50-20; and
3. Documentation of licensure as follows:
a. Verification of all mental health or health
professional licenses or certificates ever held in any other jurisdiction. In
order to qualify for endorsement, the applicant shall have no unresolved
action against a license or certificate. The board will consider history of
disciplinary action on a case-by-case basis; and
b. Documentation of a marriage and family therapy license
obtained by standards specified in subsection B of this section.;
4. Verification of a passing score on a marriage and family
therapy licensure examination in the jurisdiction in which licensure was
obtained;
5. An affidavit of having read and understood the
regulations and laws governing the practice of marriage and family therapy in
Virginia; and
6. A current report from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB).
B. Every applicant for
licensure by endorsement shall meet one of the following:
1. Educational requirements consistent with those specified in
18VAC115-50-50 and 18VAC115-50-55 and experience requirements consistent with those
specified in 18VAC115-50-60; or
2. If an applicant does not have educational and experience
credentials consistent with those required by this chapter, he shall provide:
a. Documentation of education and supervised experience that
met the requirements of the jurisdiction in which he was initially licensed as
verified by an official transcript and a certified copy of the original
application materials; and
b. Evidence of post-licensure clinical practice as a
marriage and family therapist for five 24 of the last six
years 60 months immediately preceding his licensure application in
Virginia. Clinical practice shall mean the rendering of direct clinical
services in marriage and family therapy or clinical supervision of marriage and
family services; or
3. In lieu of transcripts verifying education and
documentation verifying supervised experience, the board may accept
verification from the credentials registry of the American Association of State
Counseling Boards or any other board-recognized entity.
18VAC115-50-50. Degree program requirements.
A. The applicant shall have completed a graduate degree from
a program that prepares individuals to practice marriage and family therapy or
a discipline related to the practice of marriage and family therapy as
defined in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of Virginia from a college or
university which is accredited by a regional accrediting agency and which meets
the following criteria:
1. There must be a sequence of academic study with the
expressed intent to prepare students to practice marriage and family therapy as
documented by the institution;
2. There must be an identifiable marriage and family therapy
training faculty and an identifiable body of students who complete that
sequence of academic study; and
3. The academic unit must have clear authority and primary
responsibility for the core and specialty areas.
B. Programs that are approved by CACREP as programs in
marriage and family counseling/therapy or by COAMFTE are recognized as meeting
the definition of a graduate degree program that prepares individuals to
practice marriage and family therapy or a discipline related to the practice of
marriage and family therapy as defined in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of Virginia
requirements of subsection A of this section.
18VAC115-50-55. Course work Coursework
requirements.
A. The applicant shall have successfully completed 60
semester hours or 90 quarter hours of graduate study in the following core
areas coursework with a minimum of six semester hours or nine
quarter hours completed in each of the core areas identified in
subdivisions 1 and 2 of this subsection, and three semester hours or 4.0
quarter hours in each of the core areas identified in subdivisions 3 through 6
9 of this subsection (suggested courses are listed in parentheses
after each core area):
1. Marriage and family studies (marital and family
development; family systems theory);
2. Marriage and family therapy (systemic therapeutic
interventions and application of major theoretical approaches);
3. Human growth and development (theories of
counseling; psychotherapy techniques with individuals; human growth and
lifespan development; personality theory; psychopathology; human sexuality;
multicultural issues) across the lifespan;
4. Abnormal behaviors;
5. Diagnosis and treatment of addictive behaviors;
6. Multicultural counseling;
4. 7. Professional studies (professional
identity and function; ethical and legal issues) ethics;
5. 8. Research (research methods; quantitative
methods; statistics);
6. 9. Assessment and treatment (appraisal,
assessment and diagnostic procedures); and
7. 10. Supervised internship of at least
600 hours to include 240 hours of direct client contact. Three hundred of
the internship hours and 120 of the direct client contact, of which 200
hours shall be with couples and families. [ Internship
Only internship ] hours [ shall not begin until
earned after ] completion of 30 [ graduate ]
semester hours [ toward the graduate degree
may be counted towards residency hours ].
B. If the graduate hours in marriage and family therapy
were begun prior to January 19, 2000, the board may accept those hours if they
meet the requirements which were in effect on July 9, 1997. If the
applicant holds a current, unrestricted license as a professional counselor,
clinical psychologist, or clinical social worker, the board may accept evidence
of successful completion of 60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours of graduate
study, including a minimum of six semester hours or nine quarter hours
completed in marriage and family studies (marital and family development;
family systems theory) and six semester hours or nine quarter hours completed
in marriage and family therapy (systemic therapeutic interventions and
application of major theoretical approaches).
18VAC115-50-60. Residency requirements.
A. Registration. 1. Applicants who render counseling
marriage and family therapy services shall:
a. 1. With their supervisor, register their
supervisory contract on the appropriate forms for board approval before starting
to practice under supervision;
b. 2. Have submitted an official transcript
documenting a graduate degree as specified in 18VAC115-50-50 to include
completion of the coursework and internship requirement specified in
18VAC115-50-55; and
c. 3. Pay the registration fee.
2. After September 3, 2008, applicants who are beginning
their residencies in exempt settings shall register supervision with the board
to assure acceptability at the time of application.
B. Residency requirements.
1. The applicant shall have completed at least two years of
supervised post-graduate degree experience, representing no fewer than 4,000
3,400 hours of supervised work experience residency in the
role of a marriage and family therapist, to include 200 hours of in-person
supervision with the supervisor in the practice of marriage and family
therapy consultation and review of marriage and family services provided
by the resident. For the purpose of meeting the 200 hours of supervision
required for a residency, in-person may also include the use of technology that
maintains client confidentiality and provides real-time, visual contact between
the supervisor and the resident. At least one-half of the 200 hours of
supervision shall be rendered by a licensed marriage and family therapist.
a. Residents shall receive a minimum of one hour and a
maximum of four hours of supervision for every 40 hours of supervised work
experience.
b. No more than 100 hours of the supervision may be
acquired through group supervision, with the group consisting of no more than
six residents. One hour of group supervision will be deemed equivalent to one
hour of individual supervision.
c. Up to 20 hours of the supervision received during the
supervised internship may be counted towards the 200 hours of in-person
supervision if the supervision was provided by a licensed marriage and family
therapist or a licensed professional counselor.
2. Of the 4,000 hours stipulated, The residency
shall include documentation of at least 2,000 hours must be acquired
in direct client contact of which 1,000 hours shall be clinical
marriage and family services of which 1,000 hours shall be face-to-face client
contact with couples or families or both. The remaining hours may be
spent in the performance of ancillary counseling services. For applicants who
hold current, unrestricted licensure as a professional counselor, clinical
psychologist, or clinical social worker, the remaining hours may be waived.
3. The residency shall consist of practice in the core areas
set forth in 18VAC115-50-55.
4. The residency shall begin after the completion of a
master's degree in marriage and family therapy or a related discipline as set
forth in 18VAC115-50-50.
5. A graduate-level internship in excess of 600 hours,
which was completed in a program that meets the requirements set forth in
18VAC115-50-50, may count for no more than 600 of the required 4,000
hours of experience. The internship shall include 20 hours of individual
on-site supervision, and 20 hours of individual or group off-site supervision.
Internship hours shall not begin until completion of 30 semester hours toward
the graduate degree up to an additional 300 hours towards the
requirements of a residency.
6. A graduate-level degree internship completed in a
COAMFTE-approved program or a CACREP-approved program in marriage and family
counseling/therapy may count for no more than 900 of the required 4,000 hours
of experience. The board may consider special requests in the event that
the regulations create an undue burden in regard to geography or disability
which limits the resident's access to qualified supervision.
7. In order for a graduate level internship to be counted
toward a residency, either the clinical or faculty supervisor shall be licensed
as set forth in subsection C of this section.
8. 7. Residents shall not call themselves
marriage and family therapists, solicit clients, directly bill
for services rendered, or in any way represent themselves as marriage
and family therapists. During the residency, they may use their names, the
initials of their degree and the title "Resident in Marriage and Family
Therapy." Clients shall be informed in writing of the resident's status,
along with the name, address and telephone number of the resident's supervisor.
9. 8. Residents shall not engage in practice
under supervision in any areas for which they do not have appropriate
education.
10. Residents who do not become candidates for licensure
after five years of supervised training shall submit an explanation to the
board stating reasons the residency should be allowed to continue. 9.
The residency shall be completed in not less than [ 18
21 ] months or more than four years. Residents who began a
residency before [ (insert effective date of the regulation)
August 24, 2016, ] shall complete the residency by [ (insert
four years after the effective date) August 24, 2020 ].
An individual who does not complete the residency after four years shall submit
evidence to the board showing why the supervised experience should be allowed
to continue.
10. Residency hours that are approved by the licensing
board in another [ U.S. United States ] jurisdiction
and that meet the requirements of this section shall be accepted.
C. Supervisory qualifications. A person who provides
supervision for a resident in marriage and family therapy shall:
1. Hold an active, unrestricted license as a marriage and
family therapist, or professional counselor, clinical
psychologist, clinical social worker or psychiatrist in the jurisdiction
where the supervision is being provided;
2. Document two years post-licensure marriage and family
therapy experience; and
3. Have received professional training in supervision,
consisting of three credit hours or 4.0 quarter hours in graduate-level
coursework in supervision or at least 20 hours of continuing education in
supervision offered by a provider approved under 18VAC115-50-96. Persons who
have provided supervision for a residency prior to September 3, 2008 shall
complete such coursework or continuing education by September 3, 2010. At
least one-half of the 200 hours of supervision shall be rendered by a licensed
marriage and family therapist. [ Supervisors who are clinical
psychologists, clinical social workers, or psychiatrists and have been approved
to provide supervision may continue to do so until August 24, 2017. ]
D. Supervisory responsibilities.
1. The supervisor shall complete evaluation forms to be given
to the resident at the end of each three-month period. The supervisor shall
report the total hours of residency and evaluate the applicant's competency to
the board.
2. Supervision by an individual whose relationship to the
resident is deemed by the board to compromise the objectivity of the supervisor
is prohibited.
3. The supervisor shall provide supervision as defined in
18VAC115-50-10 and shall assume full responsibility for the clinical
activities of residents as specified within the supervisory contract, for the
duration of the residency.
18VAC115-50-70. General examination requirements.
A. All applicants for initial licensure shall pass an
examination, with a passing score as determined by the board. The
examination is waived for an applicant who holds a current and unrestricted
license as a professional counselor issued by the board.
B. The examination shall concentrate on the core areas of
marriage and family therapy set forth in subsection A of 18VAC115-50-55.
C. Approved applicants shall A candidate approved
to sit for the examination shall pass the examination within two
years from the initial notification date of approval. Failure to do so will
result in the revocation of approval and obligate the applicant to file a new
application for examination. If the candidate has not passed the
examination within two years from the date of initial approval:
1. The initial approval to sit for the examination shall
then become invalid; and
2. The applicant shall file a new application with the
board, meet the requirements in effect at that time, and provide evidence of
why the board should approve the reapplication for examination. If approved by
the board, the candidate shall pass the examination within two years of such
approval. If the examination is not passed within the additional two-year
period, a new application will not be accepted.
D. Applicants who fail the examination twice in succession
shall document completion of 45 clock hours of additional education or training
acceptable to the board addressing the areas of deficiency as reported in the
examination results prior to obtaining board approval for reexamination. Applicants
or candidates for examination shall not provide marriage and family services
unless they are under supervision approved by the board.
18VAC115-50-90. Annual renewal of license.
A. All licensees shall renew licenses on or before June 30 of
each year.
B. All licensees who intend to continue an active practice
shall submit to the board on or before June 30 of each year:
1. A completed form for renewal of the license on which the
licensee attests to compliance with the continuing competency requirements
prescribed in this chapter; and
2. The renewal fee prescribed in 18VAC115-50-20.
C. A licensee who wishes to place his license in an inactive
status may do so upon payment of the inactive renewal fee as established in
18VAC115-50-20. No person shall practice marriage and family therapy in
Virginia unless he holds a current active license. A licensee who has placed
himself in inactive status may become active by fulfilling the reactivation
requirements set forth in 18VAC115-50-100 C.
D. Licensees shall notify the board of a change in the
address of record or the public address, if different from the address of
record within 60 days. Failure to receive a renewal notice from the board shall
not relieve the license holder from the renewal requirement.
E. After the renewal date, the license is expired;
practice with an expired license is prohibited and may constitute grounds for
disciplinary action.
18VAC115-50-95. Continued competency requirements for renewal
of a license.
A. After July 1, 2004, marriage Marriage and
family therapists shall be required to have completed a minimum of 20 hours of
continuing competency for each annual licensure renewal. A minimum of two of
these hours shall be in courses that emphasize the ethics, standards of
practice or laws governing behavioral science professions in Virginia.
B. The board may grant an extension for good cause of up to
one year for the completion of continuing competency requirements upon written
request from the licensee prior to the renewal date. Such extension shall not
relieve the licensee of the continuing competency requirement.
C. The board may grant an exemption for all or part of the
continuing competency requirements due to circumstances beyond the control of
the licensee such as temporary disability, mandatory military service, or
officially declared disasters.
D. Those individuals dually licensed by this board will not
be required to obtain continuing competency for each license. Dually licensed
[ individual individuals ] will only be required to
provide the hours set out in subsection A of this section or subsection A of
18VAC115-20-105 in the Regulations Governing the Practice of Professional
Counseling, or subsection A of 18VAC115-60-115 in the Regulations Governing the
Practice of Licensed Substance Abuse Treatment Practitioners.
18VAC115-50-96. Continuing competency activity criteria.
A. Continuing competency activities must focus on increasing
knowledge or skills in one or more of the following areas:
1. Ethics, standards of practice or laws governing behavioral
science professions;
2. Counseling theory;
3. Human growth and development;
4. Social and cultural foundations;
5. The helping relationship;
6. Group dynamics, processing and counseling;
7. Lifestyle and career development;
8. Appraisal of individuals;
9. Research and evaluation;
10. Professional orientation;
11. Clinical supervision;
12. Marriage and family therapy; or
13. Addictions.
B. Approved hours of continuing competency activity shall be
one of the following types:
1. Formally organized learning activities or home study.
Activities may be counted at their full hour value. Hours shall be obtained
from one or a combination of the following board-approved, mental
health-related activities:
a. Regionally accredited university or college level academic
courses in a behavioral health discipline.
b. Continuing education programs offered by universities or
colleges.
c. Workshops, seminars, conferences, or courses in the
behavioral health field offered by federal, state, or local governmental
agencies or licensed health facilities and licensed hospitals.
d. Workshops, seminars, conferences, or courses in the
behavioral health field offered by an individual or organization that has been
certified or approved by one of the following:
(1) The American International Association of
Marriage and Family Counselors and its state affiliates.
(2) The American Association of for Marriage and
Family Therapists Therapy and its state affiliates.
(3) The American Association of State Counseling Boards.
(4) The American Counseling Association and its state and
local affiliates.
(5) The American Psychological Association and its state
affiliates.
(6) The Commission on Rehabilitation Counselor Certification.
(7) NAADAC, The Association for Addiction Professionals. and
its state and local affiliates.
(8) National Association of Social Workers.
(9) National Board for Certified Counselors.
(10) A national behavioral health organization or certification
body.
(11) Individuals or organizations that have been approved as
continuing competency sponsors by the American Association of State Counseling
Boards or a counseling board in another state.
(12) The American Association of Pastoral Counselors.
2. Individual professional activities.
a. Publication/presentation/new program development.
(1) Publication of articles. Activity will count for a maximum
of eight hours. Publication activities are limited to articles in refereed
journals or a chapter in an edited book.
(2) Publication of books. Activity will count for a maximum of
18 hours.
(3) Presentations. Activity will count for a maximum of eight
hours. The same presentations may be used only once in a two-year period. Only
actual presentation time may be counted.
(4) New program development activity will count for a maximum
of eight hours. New program development includes a new course, seminar, or
workshop. New courses shall be graduate or undergraduate level college or
university courses.
b. Dissertation. Activity will count for a maximum of 18
hours. Dissertation credit may only be counted once.
c. Clinical supervision/consultation. Activity will count for
a maximum of [ ten 10 ] hours. Continuing competency
can only be granted for clinical supervision/consultation received on a regular
basis with a set agenda. Continuing competency cannot be granted for
supervision that you provide to others.
d. Leadership. Activity will count for a maximum of eight
hours. The following leadership positions are acceptable for continuing
competency credit: officers of state or national counseling organization;
editor [ and/or or ] reviewer of professional
counseling journals; member of state counseling licensure/certification board;
member of a national counselor certification board; member of a national ethics
disciplinary review committee rendering licenses; active member of a counseling
committee producing a substantial written product; chair of a major counseling
conference or convention; other leadership positions with justifiable
professional learning experiences. The leadership positions must take place for
a minimum of one year after the date of first licensure.
e. Practice related programs. Activity will count up to a
maximum of eight hours. The board may allow up to eight contact hours of
continuing competency as long as the regulant submits proof of attendance plus
a written justification of how the activity assists him in his direct service
of his clients. Examples include language courses, software training, medical
topics, etc.
18VAC115-50-100. Late renewal, reinstatement.
A. A person whose license has expired may renew it within one
year after its expiration date by paying the penalty late fee
prescribed in 18VAC115-50-20 as well as the license fee prescribed for the
period the license was not renewed and providing evidence of having met all
applicable continuing competency requirements.
B. A person seeking reinstatement of a license one year or
more after its expiration date must apply:
1. Apply for reinstatement, and pay the
reinstatement fee, submit;
2. Submit documentation of any mental health license he
holds or has held in another jurisdiction, if applicable;
3. Submit evidence regarding the continued ability to
perform the functions within the scope of practice of the license, if
required by the board to demonstrate competency; and provide
4. Provide evidence of having met all applicable
continuing competency requirements not to exceed a maximum of 80 hours obtained
within the four years immediately preceding application for reinstatement.
C. A person wishing to reactivate an inactive license shall
submit (i) the renewal fee for active licensure minus any fee already paid for
inactive licensure renewal and (ii) documentation of continued competency hours
equal to the number of years the license has been inactive, not to exceed a
maximum of 80 hours, obtained within the four years immediately preceding
application for reinstatement. The board may require additional evidence
regarding the person's continued ability to perform the functions within the
scope of practice of the license.
18VAC115-50-110. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public's health, safety and welfare
and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in determining
the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose activities are
regulated by the board. Regardless of the delivery method, whether in person,
by phone or electronically, these standards shall apply to the practice of
marriage and family therapy.
B. Persons licensed or registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare;
2. Practice only within the boundaries of their competence,
based on their education, training, supervised experience and appropriate
professional experience and represent their education, training, and experience
accurately to clients;
3. Stay abreast of new marriage and family therapy
information, concepts, applications and practices that are necessary to
providing appropriate, effective professional services;
4. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as necessary
and appropriate for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes;
5. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate a
counseling relationship when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting
from the relationship. Document the assistance provided in making appropriate
arrangements for the continuation of treatment for clients, when necessary,
following termination of a counseling relationship;
6. Make appropriate arrangements for continuation of services,
when necessary, during interruptions such as vacations, unavailability,
relocation, illness, and disability;
7. Disclose to clients all experimental methods of treatment
and inform client of the risks and benefits of any such treatment. Ensure that
the welfare of the client is not compromised in any experimentation or research
involving those clients;
8. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates or other forms
of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services;
9. Inform clients of the purposes, goals, techniques,
procedures, limitations, potential risks, and benefits of services to be
performed; the limitations of confidentiality; and other pertinent information
when counseling is initiated and throughout the counseling process as
necessary. Provide clients with accurate information regarding the implications
of diagnosis, the intended use of tests and reports, fees, and billing
arrangements;
10. Select tests for use with clients that are valid, reliable
and appropriate and carefully interpret the performance of individuals not represented
in standardized norms;
11. Determine whether a client is receiving services from
another mental health service provider, and if so, refrain from providing
services to the client without having an informed consent discussion with the
client and having been granted communication privileges with the other
professional;
12. Use only in connection with one's practice as a mental
health professional those educational and professional degrees or titles that
have been earned at a college or university accredited by an accrediting agency
recognized by the United States U.S. Department of Education, or
credentials granted by a national certifying agency, and that are counseling in
nature; and
13. Advertise professional services fairly and accurately in a
manner that is not false, misleading or deceptive.
C. In regard to patient records, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Maintain written or electronic clinical records for each
client to include treatment dates and identifying information to substantiate
diagnosis and treatment plan, client progress, and termination;
2. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees of
the requirements of confidentiality and provide for the destruction of records
that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client confidentiality;
3. Disclose or release client records to others only with
clients' expressed written consent or that of their legally authorized
representative in accordance with § 32.1-127.1:03 of the Code of Virginia;
4. Ensure confidentiality in the usage of client records and
clinical materials by obtaining informed consent from clients or their legally
authorized representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio recording, (iii)
permitting third party observation, or (iv) using identifiable client records
and clinical materials in teaching, writing, or public presentations; and
5. Maintain client records for a minimum of five years or as
otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the counseling
relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall be maintained
for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years) or 10
years following termination, whichever comes later;
b. Records that are required by contractual obligation or
federal law to be maintained for a longer period of time; or
c. Records that have transferred to another mental health
service provider or given to the client or his legally authorized
representative.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Avoid dual relationships with clients that could impair
professional judgment or increase the risk of harm to clients. Examples of such
relationships include, but are not limited to, familial, social, financial,
business, bartering, or close personal relationships with clients. Counselors
Marriage and family therapists shall take appropriate professional
precautions when a dual relationship cannot be avoided, such as informed
consent, consultation, supervision, and documentation to ensure that judgment
is not impaired and no exploitation occurs;
2. Not engage in any type of romantic relationships or
sexual intimacies with clients or those included in a collateral relationship
with the client and also not counsel persons with whom they have had a sexual
intimacy or romantic relationship. Marriage and family therapists shall
not engage in romantic relationships or sexual intimacies with former
clients within a minimum of five years after terminating the counseling
relationship. Marriage and family therapists who engage in such relationship or
intimacy after five years following termination shall have the
responsibility to examine and document thoroughly that such relations do not
have an exploitive nature, based on factors such as duration of counseling,
amount of time since counseling, termination circumstances, client's personal
history and mental status, or adverse impact on the client. A client's consent
to, initiation of or participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a
marriage and family therapist does not change the nature of the conduct nor
lift the regulatory prohibition;
3. Not engage in any romantic relationships or sexual
relationship or establish a counseling or psychotherapeutic relationship with a
supervisee or student. Marriage and family therapists shall avoid any
nonsexual dual relationship with a supervisee or student in which there
is a risk of exploitation or potential harm to the supervisee or student
or the potential for interference with the supervisor's professional judgment;
and
4. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties of
the nature and directions of loyalties and responsibilities involved.
E. Persons licensed by this board shall report to the board
known or suspected violations of the laws and regulations governing the
practice of marriage and family therapy.
F. Persons licensed by the board shall advise their clients
of their right to report to the Department of Health Professions any
information of which the licensee may become aware in his professional capacity
indicating that there is a reasonable probability that a person licensed or
certified as a mental health service provider, as defined in § 54.1-2400.1
of the Code of Virginia, may have engaged in unethical, fraudulent or
unprofessional conduct as defined by the pertinent licensing statutes and
regulations.
18VAC115-50-120. Disciplinary action.
A. Action by the board to revoke, suspend, deny issuance or
removal of a license, or take other disciplinary action may be taken in
accordance with the following:
1. Conviction of a felony, or of a misdemeanor involving moral
turpitude, or violation of or aid to another in violating any provision of
Chapter 35 (§ 54.1-3500 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, any
other statute applicable to the practice of marriage and family therapy, or any
provision of this chapter;
2. Procurement of a license, including submission of an
application or supervisory forms, by fraud or misrepresentation;
3. Conducting one's practice in such a manner as to make it a
danger to the health and welfare of one's clients or the general public or if
one is unable to practice marriage and family therapy with reasonable skill and
safety to clients by reason of illness, abusive use of alcohol, drugs,
narcotics, chemicals, or other type of material or result of any mental or
physical condition;
4. Intentional or negligent conduct that causes or is likely
to cause injury to a client or clients;
5. Performance of functions outside the demonstrable areas of
competency;
6. Violating or abetting another person in the violation of
any provision of any statute applicable to the practice of marriage and family
therapy, or any part or portion of this chapter; or
7. Failure to comply with the continued competency
requirements set forth in this chapter; or
8. Performance of an act likely to deceive, defraud, or
harm the public.
B. Following the revocation or suspension of a license, the
licensee may petition the board for reinstatement upon good cause shown or as a
result of substantial new evidence having been obtained that would alter the
determination reached.
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC115-60-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia:
"Board"
"Licensed substance abuse treatment practitioner"
"Substance abuse"
"Substance abuse treatment"
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Ancillary services" means activities such as
case management, recordkeeping, referral, and coordination of services.
"Applicant" means any individual who has submitted
an official application and paid the application fee for licensure as a
substance abuse treatment practitioner.
"CACREP" means the Council for Accreditation of
Counseling and Related Education Educational Programs.
"Candidate for licensure" means a person who has
satisfactorily completed all educational and experience requirements for
licensure and has been deemed eligible by the board to sit for its
examinations.
"Clinical substance abuse treatment services"
means activities such as assessment, diagnosis, treatment planning, and
treatment implementation.
"COAMFTE" means the Commission on Accreditation for
Marriage and Family Therapy Education.
"Competency area" means an area in which a person
possesses knowledge and skill and the ability to apply them in the clinical
setting.
"Exempt setting" means an agency or institution in
which licensure is not required to engage in the practice of substance abuse
treatment according to the conditions set forth in § 54.1-3501 of the Code
of Virginia.
"Face-to-face" means the in-person delivery of
clinical substance abuse treatment services for a client.
"Group supervision" means the process of clinical
supervision of no more than six persons in a group setting provided by a
qualified supervisor.
"Internship" means supervised, planned,
practical, advanced experience obtained in the clinical setting, observing and
applying the principles, methods and techniques learned in training or
educational settings a formal academic course from a regionally
accredited university in which supervised, practical experience is obtained in
a clinical setting in the application of counseling principles, methods and
techniques.
"Jurisdiction" means a state, territory, district,
province or country which has granted a professional certificate or license to
practice a profession, use a professional title, or hold oneself out as a
practitioner of that profession.
"Nonexempt setting" means a setting which does not
meet the conditions of exemption from the requirements of licensure to engage
in the practice of substance abuse treatment as set forth in § 54.1-3501 of the
Code of Virginia.
"Regional accrediting agency" means one of the
regional accreditation agencies recognized by the United States U.S.
Secretary of Education responsible for accrediting senior postsecondary
institutions.
"Residency" means a post-internship postgraduate,
supervised, clinical experience registered with the board.
"Resident" means an individual who has submitted a
supervisory contract and has received board approval to provide clinical
services in substance abuse treatment under supervision.
18VAC115-60-20. Fees required by the board.
A. The board has established the following fees applicable to
licensure as a substance abuse treatment practitioner:
|
Registration of supervision (initial)
|
$50
|
|
Add/change supervisor
|
$25
|
|
Initial licensure by examination: Processing and initial
licensure
|
$140
|
|
Initial licensure by endorsement: Processing and initial
licensure
|
$140
|
|
Active annual license renewal
|
$105
|
|
Inactive annual license renewal
|
$55
|
|
Duplicate license
|
$5
|
|
Verification of license to another jurisdiction
|
$25
|
|
Late renewal
|
$35
|
|
Reinstatement of a lapsed license
|
$165
|
|
Replacement of or additional wall certificate
|
$15
|
|
Returned check
|
$35
|
|
Reinstatement following revocation or suspension
|
$500
|
|
One-time reduction for renewal of an active license due
on June 30, 2010
|
$52
|
|
One-time reduction for renewal of an inactive license due
on June 30, 2010
|
$27
|
B. Fees shall be paid directly to the board or its
contractor, or both, in appropriate amounts as specified in the application
instructions. All fees are nonrefundable.
C. Examination fees shall be determined and made payable as
determined by the board.
Part II
Requirements for Licensure
18VAC115-60-40. Application for licensure by examination.
Every applicant for examination for licensure by
examination by the board shall:
1. Meet the degree program, course work coursework,
and experience requirements prescribed in 18VAC115-60-60, 18VAC115-60-70,
and 18VAC115-60-80; and
2. Pass the examination required for initial licensure as
prescribed in 18VAC115-60-90;
3. Submit the following items to the board:
a. A completed application;
b. Official transcripts documenting the applicant's completion
of the degree program and [ course work coursework ]
requirements prescribed in 18VAC115-60-60 and 18VAC115-60-70. Transcripts previously
submitted for registration of supervision do not have to be resubmitted unless
additional coursework was subsequently obtained;
c. Verification of supervision forms documenting fulfillment
of the experience residency requirements of 18VAC115-60-80 and
copies of all required evaluation forms, including verification of current
licensure of the supervisor of any portion of the residency occurred in another
jurisdiction;
d. Documentation of any other mental health or health
professional license or certificate ever held in another jurisdiction; and
e. The application processing and initial licensure fee.
as prescribed in 18VAC115-60-20; and
f. A current report from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB); and
4. Have no unresolved disciplinary action against a mental
health or health professional license or certificate held in Virginia or in
another jurisdiction. The board will consider history of disciplinary action on
a case-by-case basis.
18VAC115-60-50. Prerequisites for licensure by endorsement.
A. Every applicant for licensure by endorsement shall submit:
1. A completed application;
2. The application processing and initial licensure fee as
prescribed in 18VAC115-60-20;
3. Verification of all mental health or health
professional licenses or certificates ever held in any other jurisdiction. In
order to qualify for endorsement, the applicant shall have no unresolved
disciplinary action against a license or certificate. The board will consider
history of disciplinary action on a case-by-case basis;
4. Further documentation of one of the following:
a. A current substance abuse treatment license in good
standing in another jurisdiction obtained by meeting requirements substantially
equivalent to those set forth in this chapter; or
b. A mental health license in good standing in a category
acceptable to the board which required completion of a master's degree in
mental health to include 60 graduate semester hours in mental health; and
(1) Board-recognized national certification in substance abuse
treatment;
(2) If the master's degree was in substance abuse treatment,
two years of post-licensure experience in providing substance abuse treatment;
(3) If the master's degree was not in substance abuse
treatment, five years of post-licensure experience in substance abuse treatment
plus 12 credit hours of didactic training in the substance abuse treatment
competencies set forth in 18VAC115-60-70 C; or
(4) Current substance abuse counselor certification in
Virginia in good standing or a Virginia substance abuse treatment specialty
licensure designation with two years of post-licensure or certification
substance abuse treatment experience;
c. Documentation of education and supervised experience that
met the requirements of the jurisdiction in which he was initially licensed as
verified by an official transcript and a certified copy of the original
application materials and evidence of post-licensure clinical practice for five
24 of the last six years 60 months immediately preceding
his licensure application in Virginia. Clinical practice shall mean the
rendering of direct clinical substance abuse treatment services or clinical
supervision of such services.
5. Verification of a passing score on a substance abuse
licensure examination as established by the jurisdiction in which licensure was
obtained. The examination is waived for an applicant who holds a current and
unrestricted license as a professional counselor within the Commonwealth of
Virginia;
6. Official transcripts documenting the applicant's completion
of the education requirements prescribed in 18VAC115-60-60 and 18VAC115-60-70; and
7. An affidavit of having read and understood the regulations
and laws governing the practice of substance abuse treatment in Virginia;
and
8. A current report from the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB).
B. In lieu of transcripts verifying education and
documentation verifying supervised experience, the board may accept
verification from the credentials registry of the American Association of State
Counseling Boards or any other board-recognized entity.
18VAC115-60-55. Time-limited waiver of certain licensure
requirements. (Repealed.)
Until February 26, 2004, individuals who do not meet the
licensure requirements set forth in 18VAC115-60-50 and 18VAC115-60-60 through
18VAC115-60-90 may be eligible for licensure if they submit a completed
application and processing fee and provide evidence that they meet the
following criteria:
1. A passing score on a board-approved examination;
2. A minimum of three comprehensive reports from:
a. At least two licensed mental health professionals, one
of whom must be licensed in Virginia, that affirm competence in all areas
outlined in 18VAC115-60-80 C 1 and attest to the applicant's ability to
practice autonomously; and
b. One or more clinical supervisors who have provided
supervision, as defined in 18VAC115-60-10, of the applicant for a total of one
year within the applicant's most recent five years of practice. If supervision
was provided in an exempt setting, the report may be submitted by an unlicensed
mental health professional; and
3. One of the following:
a. Five years full-time experience in substance abuse
treatment plus a master's degree in a mental health field from a regionally
accredited institution of higher learning with a total of 36 graduate hours
covering mental health content to include three graduate semester hours or 4.5
graduate quarter hours in each area of the following:
(1) Counseling and psychotherapy techniques;
(2) Appraisal, evaluation and diagnostic procedures;
(3) Abnormal behavior and psychopathology:
(4) Group counseling and psychotherapy, theories and
techniques; and
(5) Research.
The remaining graduate semester hours shall include content
in the following areas:
(1) Assessment, appraisal, evaluation and diagnosis
specific to substance abuse;
(2) Treatment planning models, client case management,
interventions and treatments to include relapse prevention, referral process,
step models and documentation process;
(3) Understanding addictions: The biochemical,
socio-cultural and psychological factors of substance use and abuse;
(4) Addictions and special populations, including, but not
limited to, adolescents, women, ethnic groups and the elderly; and
(5) Client and community education; or
b. Ten years full-time experience in substance abuse
treatment plus a bachelor's degree from a regionally accredited institution of
higher learning, plus 30 graduate hours covering mental health content to
include three graduate semester hours or 4.5 graduate quarter hours in each
area of the following:
(1) Counseling and psychotherapy techniques;
(2) Appraisal, evaluation and diagnostic procedures;
(3) Abnormal behavior and psychopathology;
(4) Group counseling and psychotherapy, theories and
techniques; and
(5) Research.
The remaining graduate hours shall include content in the
following areas:
(1) Assessment, appraisal, evaluation and diagnosis
specific to substance abuse;
(2) Treatment planning models, client case management,
interventions and treatments to include relapse prevention, referral process,
step models and documentation process;
(3) Understanding addictions: the biochemical,
socio-cultural and psychological factors of substance use and abuse;
(4) Addictions and special populations, including, but not
limited to, adolescents, women, ethnic groups and the elderly; and
(5) Client and community education.
18VAC115-60-60. Degree program requirements.
A. The applicant shall have completed a graduate degree from
a program that prepares individuals to practice substance abuse treatment or a
related counseling discipline as defined in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of Virginia
from a college or university accredited by a regional accrediting agency that
meets the following criteria:
1. There must be a sequence of academic study with the
expressed intent to prepare counselors as documented by the institution;
2. There must be an identifiable counselor training faculty
and an identifiable body of students who complete that sequence of academic
study; and
3. The academic unit must have clear authority and primary
responsibility for the core and specialty areas.
B. Education that does not come from a degree program
meeting the requirements set forth in this section shall not be acceptable for
licensure. Programs that are approved by CACREP as programs in
addictions counseling are recognized as meeting the requirements of subsection
A of this section.
18VAC115-60-70. Course work Coursework
requirements.
A. The applicant shall have successfully completed 60
semester hours or 90 quarter hours of graduate study.
B. The applicant shall have completed a general core
curriculum containing a minimum of three semester hours or 4.0 quarter hours in
each of the areas identified in this section:
1. Professional identity, function and ethics;
2. Theories of counseling and psychotherapy;
3. Counseling and psychotherapy techniques;
4. Group counseling and psychotherapy, theories and
techniques;
5. Appraisal, evaluation and diagnostic procedures;
6. Abnormal behavior and psychopathology;
7. Multicultural counseling, theories and techniques;
8. Research; and
9. Marriage and family systems theory.
C. The applicant shall also have completed 12 graduate
semester credit hours or 18 graduate quarter hours in the following substance
abuse treatment competencies.
1. Assessment, appraisal, evaluation and diagnosis specific to
substance abuse;
2. Treatment planning models, client case management,
interventions and treatments to include relapse prevention, referral process,
step models and documentation process;
3. Understanding addictions: The biochemical, sociocultural
and psychological factors of substance use and abuse;
4. Addictions and special populations including, but not
limited to, adolescents, women, ethnic groups and the elderly; and
5. Client and community education.
D. The applicant shall have completed a supervised internship
of 600 hours to include 240 hours of direct client contact. At least 450 of
the internship hours and, of which 200 of the direct client
contact hours shall be in treating substance abuse-specific treatment
problems. [ Internship Only internship ] hours
[ shall not begin until earned after ] completion
of 30 [ graduate ] semester hours [ toward
the graduate degree may be counted towards residency hours ].
E. One course may satisfy study in more than one content area
set forth in subsections B and C of this section.
F. If the applicant holds a current, unrestricted license
as a professional counselor, clinical psychologist, or clinical social worker,
the board may accept evidence of successful completion of 60 semester hours or
90 quarter hours of graduate study, including the hours specified in subsection
C of this section.
18VAC115-60-80. Residency requirements.
A. Registration. Applicants who render substance abuse
treatment services shall:
1. With their supervisor, register their supervisory contract
on the appropriate forms for board approval before starting to practice under
supervision;
2. Have submitted an official transcript documenting a
graduate degree as specified in 18VAC115-60-60 to include completion of the coursework
and internship requirement specified in 18VAC115-60-70; and
3. Pay the registration fee.
B. After September 3, 2008, applicants Applicants
who are beginning their residencies in exempt settings shall register
supervision with the board to assure acceptability at the time of application.
C. Residency requirements.
1. The applicant for licensure shall have completed a 4,000
hour no fewer than 3,400 hours in a supervised residency in
substance abuse treatment with various populations, clinical problems and
theoretical approaches in the following areas:
a. Clinical evaluation;
b. Treatment planning, documentation and implementation;
c. Referral and service coordination;
d. Individual and group counseling and case management;
e. Client family and community education; and
f. Professional and ethical responsibility.
2. The residency shall include a minimum of 200 hours of in-person
supervision between supervisor and resident occurring at a minimum of one hour
and a maximum of four hours per 40 hours of work experience during the period
of the residency.
a. No more than half of these hours may be satisfied
with group supervision.
b. One hour of group supervision will be deemed
equivalent to one hour of individual supervision.
c. Supervision that is not concurrent with a residency
will not be accepted, nor will residency hours be accrued in the absence of
approved supervision.
d. For the purpose of meeting the 200-hour supervision
requirement, in-person supervision may include the use of technology that
maintains client confidentiality and provides real-time, visual contact between
the supervisor and the resident.
e. Up to 20 hours of the supervision received during the
supervised internship may be counted towards the 200 hours of in-person
supervision if the supervision was provided by a licensed professional
counselor.
3. The residency shall include at least 2,000 hours of
face-to-face client contact in providing clinical substance abuse treatment
services with individuals, families, or groups of individuals
suffering from the effects of substance abuse or dependence. The remaining
hours may be spent in the performance of ancillary services.
4. A graduate level degree internship in excess of 600
hours, which is completed in a program that meets the requirements set
forth in 18VAC115-60-70, may count for no more than 600 hours of the
required 4,000 hours of experience. The internship shall include 20 hours of
individual on-site supervision, and 20 hours of individual or group off-site
supervision. Internship hours shall not begin until completion of 30 semester
hours toward the graduate degree up to an additional 300 hours towards
the requirements of a residency.
5. A graduate-level degree internship completed in a
COAMFTE- or CACREP-approved program may count for no more than 900 of the
required 4,000 hours of experience. The residency shall be completed in
not less than [ 18 21 ] months or more than
four years. Residents who began a residency before [ (insert
effective date of the regulation) August 24, 2016, ] shall
complete the residency by [ (insert four years after the
effective date) August 24, 2020 ]. An individual who
does not complete the residency after four years shall submit evidence to the
board showing why the supervised experience should be allowed to continue.
6. In order for a graduate level internship to be counted
toward a residency, either the clinical or faculty supervisor shall be licensed
as set forth in subsection D of this section.
7. 6. The board may consider special requests in
the event that the regulations create an undue burden in regard to geography or
disability which limits the resident's access to qualified supervision.
8. 7. Residents may not call themselves
substance abuse treatment practitioners, directly bill for services rendered,
or in any way represent themselves as independent, autonomous practitioners or
substance abuse treatment practitioners. During the residency, residents shall
use their names and the initials of their degree, and the title "Resident
in Substance Abuse Treatment" in all written communications. Clients shall
be informed in writing of the resident's status, the supervisor's name,
professional address, and telephone number.
9. 8. Residents shall not engage in practice
under supervision in any areas for which they have not had appropriate
education.
9. Residency hours that are approved by the licensing board
in another [ U.S. United States ] jurisdiction
and that meet the requirements of this section shall be accepted.
D. Supervisory qualifications.
1. A person who provides supervision for a resident in
substance abuse treatment shall hold an active, unrestricted license as a
professional counselor, marriage and family therapist, or
substance abuse treatment practitioner, school psychologist, clinical
psychologist, clinical social worker, clinical nurse specialist or psychiatrist
in the jurisdiction where the supervision is being provided. [ Supervisors
who are marriage and family therapists, school psychologists, clinical
psychologists, clinical social workers, clinical nurse specialists, or
psychiatrists and have been approved to provide supervision may continue to do
so until August 24, 2017. ]
2. All supervisors shall document two years post-licensure
substance abuse treatment experience, and at least 100 hours of
didactic instruction in substance abuse treatment, and training or
experience in supervision. Within three years of January 19, 2000,
supervisors Supervisors must document a three-credit-hour course in
supervision, a 4.0-quarter-hour course in supervision, or at least 20 hours of
continuing education in supervision offered by a provider approved under
18VAC115-60-116.
E. Supervisory responsibilities.
1. Supervision by any individual whose relationship to the
resident compromises the objectivity of the supervisor is prohibited.
2. The supervisor of a resident shall assume full
responsibility for the clinical activities of that resident specified within
the supervisory contract for the duration of the residency.
3. The supervisor shall complete evaluation forms to be given
to the resident at the end of each three-month period.
4. The supervisor shall report the total hours of residency
and shall evaluate the applicant's competency in the six areas stated in
subdivision C 1 of this section.
F. Documentation of supervision. Applicants shall document
successful completion of their residency on the Verification of Supervision
form at the time of application. Applicants must receive a satisfactory
competency evaluation on each item on the evaluation sheet. Supervised
experience obtained prior to January 19, 2000, may be accepted towards
licensure if this supervised experience met the board's requirements which were
in effect at the time the supervision was rendered.
Part III
Examinations
18VAC115-60-90. General examination requirements; schedules;
time limits.
A. Every applicant for initial licensure as a substance abuse
treatment practitioner by examination shall pass a written examination as
prescribed by the board.
B. Every applicant for licensure as a substance abuse
treatment practitioner by endorsement shall have passed an a
substance abuse examination deemed by the board to be substantially
equivalent to the Virginia examination.
C. The examination is waived for an applicant who holds a current
and unrestricted license as a professional counselor issued by the board.
D. A candidate approved by the board to sit for the
examination shall take pass the examination within two years from
the date of such initial board approval. If the candidate has not taken passed
the examination by the end of the two-year period prescribed in this
subsection within two years from the date of initial approval:
1. The initial board approval to sit for the examination shall
then become invalid; and
2. In order to be considered for the examination later, the
The applicant shall file a complete new application with the board,
meet the requirements in effect at that time, and provide evidence of why the
board should approve the reapplication for examination. If approved by the
board, the applicant shall pass the examination within two years of such
approval. If the examination is not passed within the additional two-year
period, a new application will not be accepted.
D. Applicants who fail the examination twice in succession
shall document completion of 45 clock hours of additional education or training
acceptable to the board, addressing the areas of deficiency as reported in the
examination results prior to obtaining board approval for reexamination.
E. The board shall establish a passing score on the written
examination.
F. A candidate for examination or an applicant shall not
provide clinical services unless he is under supervision approved by the board.
Part IV
Licensure Renewal; Reinstatement
18VAC115-60-110. Renewal of licensure.
A. All licensees shall renew licenses on or before June 30 of
each year.
B. Every license holder who intends to continue an active
practice shall submit to the board on or before June 30 of each year:
1. A completed form for renewal of the license on which the
licensee attests to compliance with the continuing competency requirements
prescribed in this chapter; and
2. The renewal fee prescribed in 18VAC115-60-20.
C. A licensee who wishes to place his license in an inactive
status may do so upon payment of the inactive renewal fee as established in
18VAC115-60-20. No person shall practice substance abuse treatment in Virginia
unless he holds a current active license. A licensee who has placed himself in
inactive status may become active by fulfilling the reactivation requirements
set forth in 18VAC115-60-120 C.
D. Licensees shall notify the board of a change in the
address of record or the public address, if different from the address of
record within 60 days. Failure to receive a renewal notice from the board shall
not relieve the license holder from the renewal requirement.
E. After the renewal date, the license is expired;
practice with an expired license is prohibited and may constitute grounds for
disciplinary action.
18VAC115-60-115. Continued competency requirements for renewal
of a license.
A. After July 1, 2004, licensed Licensed
substance abuse treatment practitioners shall be required to have completed a
minimum of 20 hours of continuing competency for each annual licensure renewal.
A minimum of two of these hours shall be in courses that emphasize the ethics,
standard of practice or laws governing behavioral science professions in
Virginia.
B. The board may grant an extension for good cause of up to
one year for the completion of continuing competency requirements upon written
request from the licensee prior to the renewal date. Such extension shall not
relieve the licensee of the continuing competency requirement.
C. The board may grant an exemption for all or part of the
continuing competency requirements due to circumstances beyond the control of
the licensee, such as temporary disability, mandatory military service, or
officially declared disasters.
D. Those individuals dually licensed by this board will not
be required to obtain continuing competency for each license. Dually licensed
individuals will only be required to provide the hours set out in subsection A
of this section or subsection A of 18VAC115-50-95 in the Regulations Governing
the Practice of Marriage and Family Therapy, or subsection A of 18VAC115-20-105
in the Regulations Governing the Practice of Professional Counseling.
18VAC115-60-116. Continuing competency activity criteria.
A. Continuing competency activities must focus on increasing
knowledge or skills in one or more of the following areas:
1. Ethics, standards of practice or laws governing behavioral
science professions;
2. Counseling theory;
3. Human growth and development;
4. Social and cultural foundations;
5. The helping relationship;
6. Group dynamics, processing and counseling;
7. Lifestyle and career development;
8. Appraisal of individuals;
9. Research and evaluation;
10. Professional orientation;
11. Clinical supervision;
12. Marriage and family therapy; or
13. Addictions.
B. Approved hours of continuing competency activity shall be
one of the following types:
1. Formally organized learning activities or home study.
Activities may be counted at their full hour value. Hours shall be obtained
from one or a combination of the following board-approved, mental
health-related activities:
a. Regionally accredited university-or college-level academic
courses in a behavioral health discipline.
b. Continuing education programs offered by universities or
colleges.
c. Workshops, seminars, conferences, or courses in the
behavioral health field offered by federal, state, or local governmental
agencies or licensed health facilities and licensed hospitals.
d. Workshops, seminars, conferences, or courses in the
behavioral health field offered by an individual or organization that has been
certified or approved by one of the following:
(1) The American International Association of
Marriage and Family Counselors and its state affiliates.
(2) The American Association of for Marriage and
Family Therapists Therapy and its state affiliates.
(3) The American Association of State Counseling Boards.
(4) The American Counseling Association and its state and
local affiliates.
(5) The American Psychological Association and its state
affiliates.
(6) The Commission on Rehabilitation Counselor Certification.
(7) NAADAC, The Association for Addiction Professionals, and
its state and local affiliates.
(8) National Association of Social Workers.
(9) The National Board for Certified Counselors.
(10) A national behavioral health organization or
certification body.
(11) Individuals or organizations that have been approved as
continuing competency sponsors by the American Association of State Counseling
Boards or a counseling board in another state.
2. Individual professional activities.
a. Publication/presentation/new program development.
(1) Publication of articles. Activity will count for a maximum
of eight hours. Publication activities are limited to articles in refereed
journals or a chapter in an edited book.
(2) Publication of books. Activity will count for a maximum of
18 hours.
(3) Presentations. Activity will count for a maximum of eight
hours. The same presentations may be used only once in a two-year period. Only
actual presentation time may be counted.
(4) New program development. Activity will count for a maximum
of eight hours. New program development includes a new course, seminar, or workshop.
New courses shall be graduate or undergraduate level college or university
courses.
b. Dissertation. Activity will count for a maximum of 18
hours. Dissertation credit may only be counted once.
c. Clinical supervision/consultation. Activity will count for
a maximum of 10 hours. Continuing competency can only be granted for clinical
supervision/consultation received on a regular basis with a set agenda.
Continuing competency cannot be granted for supervision that you provide to
others.
d. Leadership. Activity will count for a maximum of eight
hours. The following leadership positions are acceptable for continuing
competency credit: officers of state or national counseling organization;
editor [ and/or or ] reviewer of professional
counseling journals; member of state counseling licensure/certification board;
member of a national counselor certification board; member of a national ethics
disciplinary review committee rendering licenses; active member of a counseling
committee producing a substantial written product; chair of a major counseling
conference or convention; other leadership positions with justifiable
professional learning experiences. The leadership positions must take place for
a minimum of one year after the date of first licensure.
e. Practice related programs. Activity will count up to a
maximum of eight hours. The board may allow up to eight contact hours of
continuing competency as long as the regulant submits proof of attendance plus
a written justification of how the activity assists him in his direct service
of his clients. Examples include language courses, software training, medical
topics, etc.
18VAC115-60-120. Late renewal; reinstatement.
A. A person whose license has expired may renew it within one
year after its expiration date by paying the late renewal fee prescribed in
18VAC115-60-20, as well as the license fee prescribed for the year the license
was not renewed and providing evidence of having met all applicable continuing
competency requirements.
B. A person who fails to renew a license after one year or
more and wishes to resume practice shall apply for reinstatement, pay the
reinstatement fee for a lapsed license, submit evidence regarding the
continued ability to perform the functions within the scope of practice of the
license verification of any mental health license he holds or has held
in another jurisdiction, if applicable, and provide evidence of having met
all applicable continuing competency requirements not to exceed a maximum of 80
hours obtained within the four years immediately preceding application for
reinstatement. The board may require the applicant for reinstatement to
submit evidence regarding the continued ability to perform the functions within
the scope of practice of the license.
C. A person wishing to reactivate an inactive license shall
submit (i) the renewal fee for active licensure minus any fee already paid for
inactive licensure renewal and; (ii) documentation of continued
competency hours equal to the number of years the license has been inactive not
to exceed a maximum of 80 hours obtained within the four years immediately
preceding application for reactivation; and (iii) verification of any mental
health license he holds or has held in another jurisdiction, if applicable.
The board may require the applicant for reactivation to submit evidence
regarding the continued ability to perform the functions within the scope of
practice of the license.
Part V
Standards of Practice; Unprofessional Conduct; Disciplinary Actions;
Reinstatement
18VAC115-60-130. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public health, safety, and welfare
and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in determining
the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose activities are
regulated by the board. Regardless of the delivery method, whether in person,
by phone or electronically, these standards shall apply to the practice of
substance abuse treatment.
B. Persons licensed or registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare;
2. Practice only within the boundaries of their competence,
based on their education, training, supervised experience and appropriate
professional experience and represent their education, training and experience
accurately to clients;
3. Stay abreast of new substance abuse treatment information,
concepts, application and practices that are necessary to providing
appropriate, effective professional services;
4. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as
necessary and appropriate for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes;
5. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate a
counseling relationship when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting
from the relationship. Document the assistance provided in making appropriate
arrangements for the continuation of treatment for clients, when necessary,
following termination of a counseling relationship;
6. Make appropriate arrangements for continuation of services,
when necessary, during interruptions such as vacations, unavailability,
relocation, illness, and disability;
7. Disclose to clients all experimental methods of treatment
and inform clients of the risks and benefits of any such treatment. Ensure that
the welfare of the clients is in no way compromised in any experimentation or
research involving those clients;
8. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates, or other
forms of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services;
9. Inform clients of the purposes, goals, techniques,
procedures, limitations, potential risks, and benefits of services to be
performed; the limitations of confidentiality; and other pertinent information
when counseling is initiated and throughout the counseling process as
necessary. Provide clients with accurate information regarding the implications
of diagnosis, the intended use of tests and reports, fees, and billing
arrangements;
10. Select tests for use with clients that are valid, reliable
and appropriate and carefully interpret the performance of individuals not
represented in standardized norms;
11. Determine whether a client is receiving services from
another mental health service provider, and if so, refrain from providing
services to the client without having an informed consent discussion with the
client and having been granted communication privileges with the other
professional;
12. Use only in connection with one's practice as a mental
health professional those educational and professional degrees or titles that
have been earned at a college or university accredited by an accrediting agency
recognized by the United States U.S. Department of Education, or
credentials granted by a national certifying agency, and that are counseling in
nature; and
13. Advertise professional services fairly and accurately in a
manner that is not false, misleading or deceptive.
C. In regard to patient records, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Maintain written or electronic clinical records for each
client to include treatment dates and identifying information to substantiate
diagnosis and treatment plan, client progress, and termination;
2. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees of
the requirements of confidentiality and provide for the destruction of records
that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client confidentiality;
3. Disclose or release records to others only with clients'
expressed written consent or that of their legally authorized representative in
accordance with § 32.1-127.1:03 of the Code of Virginia;
4. Maintain client records for a minimum of five years or as
otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the substance abuse
treatment relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall be maintained
for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years) or 10
years following termination, whichever comes later;
b. Records that are required by contractual obligation or
federal law to be maintained for a longer period of time; or
c. Records that have been transferred to another mental
health service provider or given to the client; and
5. Ensure confidentiality in the usage of client records and
clinical materials by obtaining informed consent from clients or their legally
authorized representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio recording, (iii)
permitting third party observation, or (iv) using identifiable client records
and clinical materials in teaching, writing or public presentations.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Avoid dual relationships with clients that could impair
professional judgment or increase the risk of harm to clients. Examples of such
relationships include, but are not limited to, familial, social, financial,
business, bartering, or close personal relationships with clients. Counselors
shall take appropriate professional precautions when a dual relationship cannot
be avoided, such as informed consent, consultation, supervision, and
documentation to ensure that judgment is not impaired and no exploitation
occurs;
2. Not engage in any type of romantic relationships or
sexual intimacies with clients or those included in a collateral relationship
with the client and not counsel persons with whom they have had a sexual
romantic relationship or sexual intimacy. Licensed substance
abuse treatment practitioners shall not engage in romantic relationships or
sexual intimacies with former clients within a minimum of five years after
terminating the counseling relationship. Licensed substance abuse treatment
practitioners who engage in such relationship or intimacy after five
years following termination shall have the responsibility to examine and
document thoroughly that such relations do not have an exploitive nature, based
on factors such as duration of counseling, amount of time since counseling,
termination circumstances, client's personal history and mental status, or
adverse impact on the client. A client's consent to, initiation of or
participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a licensed substance abuse
treatment practitioner does not change the nature of the conduct nor lift the
regulatory prohibition;
3. Not engage in any sexual intimacy or romantic
relationship or establish a counseling or psychotherapeutic relationship with a
supervisee or student. Licensed substance abuse treatment practitioners
shall avoid any nonsexual dual relationship with a supervisee or student
in which there is a risk of exploitation or potential harm to the supervisee or
the potential for interference with the supervisor's professional judgment; and
4. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties of
the nature and directions of loyalties and responsibilities involved.
E. Persons licensed by this board shall report to the board
known or suspected violations of the laws and regulations governing the
practice of substance abuse treatment.
F. Persons licensed by the board shall advise their clients
of their right to report to the Department of Health Professions any information
of which the licensee may become aware in his professional capacity indicating
that there is a reasonable probability that a person licensed or certified as a
mental health service provider, as defined in § 54.1-2400.1 of the Code of
Virginia, may have engaged in unethical, fraudulent or unprofessional conduct
as defined by the pertinent licensing statutes and regulations.
18VAC115-60-140. Grounds for revocation, suspension, probation,
reprimand, censure, or denial of renewal of license.
A. Action by the board to revoke, suspend, deny issuance or
renewal of a license, or take other disciplinary action may be taken in accord
with the following:
1. Conviction of a felony, or of a misdemeanor involving moral
turpitude, or violation of or aid to another in violating any provision of
Chapter 35 (§ 54.1-3500 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, any
other statute applicable to the practice of substance abuse treatment, or any
provision of this chapter;
2. Procurement of a license, including submission of an
application or supervisory forms, by fraud or misrepresentation.;
3. Conducting one's practice in such a manner as to make it a
danger to the health and welfare of one's clients or to the public, or if one
is unable to practice substance abuse treatment with reasonable skill and
safety to clients by reason of illness, abusive use of alcohol, drugs,
narcotics, chemicals, or other type of material or result of any mental or
physical condition;
4. Intentional or negligent conduct that causes or is likely
to cause injury to a client;
5. Performance of functions outside the demonstrable areas of
competency;
6. Failure to comply with the continued competency
requirements set forth in this chapter; or
7. Violating or abetting another person in the violation of
any provision of any statute applicable to the practice of licensed substance
abuse therapy, or any part or portion of this chapter; or
8. Performance of an act likely to deceive, defraud, or
harm the public.
B. Following the revocation or suspension of a license the
licensee may petition the board for reinstatement upon good cause shown or as a
result of substantial new evidence having been obtained that would alter the
determination reached.
VA.R. Doc. No. R14-4067; Filed July 1, 2016, 11:48 a.m.