Nevada Medical Director Requirements & Compliance Rules (2025 Guide)

Nevada Medical Director Requirements & Compliance Rules | Nevada Medical Director Requirements & Compliance Rules

Disclaimer: This material is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or medical advice or regulatory guidance. Requirements and interpretations may vary and change over time. Always verify current rules directly with the Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners (NSBME), the Nevada State Board of Osteopathic Medicine, the Nevada State Board of Nursing, and the Nevada State Board of Pharmacy, and seek advice from qualified legal counsel before making decisions or taking action.

Executive Summary

Nevada Medical Director Requirements & Compliance Rules

Entity & Ownership Structure

  • Clinical authority must remain under a Nevada-licensed physician (MD/DO), consistent with Nevada’s enforcement of the Corporate Practice of Medicine (CPOM).
  • MSOs may manage non-clinical functions (billing, HR, admin, marketing) but may not direct medical judgment, diagnosis, treatment decisions, or clinical staffing.
  • Nevada relies on CPOM through board interpretation rather than a single statute, but enforcement occurs under NRS 630.301 (unprofessional conduct) when non-clinicians influence medical care.

Medical Director Credentials

  • Must hold an active, unencumbered Nevada MD/DO license. Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners — Licensure
  • DEA registration required for prescribing controlled substances.
  • Must maintain documented physician availability for consultation, emergency supervision, and QA oversight, consistent with NRS 630.3062 (failure to supervise) and professional conduct standards.

Delegation & Prescriptive Authority

APRNs

  • APRNs may practice independently with Full Practice Authority (FPA) once they meet Nevada Board of Nursing requirements. Via NRS 632.237 – APRN Requirements and NRS Chapter 632 – Nursing
  • Must hold DEA registration to prescribe controlled substances.
  • Must query Nevada’s Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) before prescribing or refilling Schedule II–IV drugs (NRS 453.162).

Physician Assistants

  • Must practice under a formal Supervisory Agreement with a Nevada physician (NRS 630.271 & NAC 630.810–630.830).
  • Agreement must specify scope of practice, prescribing authority, required supervision, and chart-review expectations.
  • PAs need Board approval for controlled-substance prescribing.

Scope of Practice Mapping

  • Maintain a written scope matrix for all clinical services (injectables, lasers, IV therapy, diagnostics).
  • Include licensure level, training/competency, and supervision level.
  • Update when new procedures or staff are added.

Quality Assurance Trail

  • Maintain chart-review logs signed by the supervising physician (Required for PAs; recommended for APRNs under risk-management best practices).
  • Document regular QA/oversight meetings.
  • Maintain competency checklists for every delegated procedure.
  • Track incident reports, corrective actions, and follow-up.

Laser / Energy Device Compliance

  • Lasers/IPL/RF devices are considered medical devices when used on living tissue or producing physiological effects, and therefore fall under the Nevada Medical Board’s scope of medical practice (NRS 630).
  • Only licensed clinicians (MD/DO, APRN, PA, RN) may use medical-grade lasers/IPL under physician-approved protocols.
  • Maintain laser-safety training, operator certifications, device maintenance logs, and emergency procedures.

Note: Nevada does not have a cosmetology exemption for medical lasers. Estheticians cannot legally use medical lasers unless they hold a medical license.

Marketing Guardrails

  • Advertising must be truthful and must not misrepresent credentials or imply clinical authority where none exists.
  • Titles must reflect actual licensure (no use of “doctor” by non-physicians), per NRS 630.306 (false advertising) and Nevada Deceptive Trade Practices Act (NRS 598.0903–598.0999).
  • Marketing may not imply that MSOs or laypersons control clinical decisions.

The Arizona Quick Compliance Checklist

Entity & Ownership Structure

Confirm the entity is structured so that a licensed physician retains clinical decision-making authority; non-physician owners may manage administrative functions.

Ensure any MSO contracts are limited to non-clinical services (e.g., billing, staffing, marketing) and do not dictate medical care.

Document physician availability for clinical oversight and ensure compliance with Arizona Revised Statutes § 32-3230. 

Medical Director Credentials

The Medical Director must hold an active, unrestricted Arizona MD or DO license from the Arizona Medical Board.

If prescribing controlled substances, they must have a valid DEA registration.

A documented plan should show the physician’s availability, consultation protocols, and emergency coverage.

Delegation & Prescriptive Authority

NPs: Depending on the scope, NPs may practice independently or under collaborative agreement; ensure applicable delegation or collaborative practice documents are correctly executed.

PAs: Under HB 2043 effective January 01, 2024, PAs with ≥ 8,000 hours may collaborate without traditional supervision. Others must have a written supervision or delegation agreement.

All prescribers: Must check the Controlled Substances Prescription Monitoring Program (CSPMP) before prescribing Schedule II, III, or IV controlled substances in Arizona.

Scope of Practice Mapping

Maintain a live document mapping each service (injectables, lasers, IV therapy, diagnostics) to the specific provider authorized, specifying supervision level and training/renewal dates.

For each procedure, indicate applicable Arizona statutes/regulations that govern the scope.

Quality Assurance Trail

Maintain documented chart reviews, QA meeting minutes, and incident/remediation logs.

Hold direct-observation competency sign-offs for each delegate performing high-risk procedures.

Device maintenance, calibration, and usage logs should also be retained.

Device Compliance (Lasers & Energy-Based Devices)

Only appropriately licensed clinicians may operate lasers/IPL/RF devices under physician-approved protocols.

Maintain documentation of operator training, laser safety certification, emergency protocols, and equipment logs.

Verify compliance with Arizona Administrative Code and Arizona Medical Board oversight.

Marketing Guardrails

Titles must reflect licensing; non-physicians may not claim “doctor” or imply ownership/control of medical decision-making.

Advertising must not make unsubstantiated claims or imply that non-physician ownership dictates medical care.

The Legal Frame: CPOM + Who Can Be a “Medical Director”?

What Is CPOM?

Nevada enforces the Corporate Practice of Medicine through NRS 630.301 and NRS 630.3062, which prohibit non-physicians from influencing medical judgment. Only licensed physicians may control clinical decisions, supervise providers, and manage medical records. MSOs may handle administrative tasks but cannot direct treatment or prescribing.

Who Can Be a Medical Director?

A medical director must be a Nevada-licensed MD/DO in good standing, responsible for clinical oversight, supervision, delegation, and QA compliance under NRS Chapter 630. Specialty is flexible, but the physician must maintain full authority over medical decisions and ensure proper supervision under Nevada Medical Board rules.

Delegation & Prescriptive Authority: The Documents that Matter

  • APRNs may evaluate, diagnose, treat, and prescribe independently once granted Full Practice Authority under NRS 632.237.
  • Prescribing controlled substances requires DEA registration and mandatory Nevada PMP (PDMP) checks per NRS 453.164.
  • While not legally required, written protocols for injectables, lasers, and medical devices are strongly recommended in medspa settings to document delegation and safety oversight.
  • PAs must practice under a Supervisory Agreement with a Nevada-licensed physician as required by NRS 630.271.
  • The agreement must outline scope of practice, prescribing authority, chart-review requirements, and supervision (direct or indirect) conditions.
  • Supervisory agreements must be maintained, updated for role or scope changes, and available to the Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners.
  • RNs may perform nursing and technical procedures under physician or APRN direction, consistent with the Nevada Nurse Practice Act (NRS Chapter 632).
  • Medical assistants are unlicensed support staff permitted only to perform basic tasks (vitals, rooming, documentation) under supervision; they may NOT perform injectables, lasers, or any medical procedures affecting living tissue—consistent with Nevada’s definition of unlicensed practice under NRS 630.400.

Practical Tips That Survive Nevada Audits (Verified 2025)

  • Set sustainable QA processes: Nevada boards expect consistent documentation of supervision and quality assurance. Choose chart-review and meeting frequencies you can maintain, and keep signed logs.

  • Maintain a delegation index: Track all APRN FPA verification and PA Supervisory Agreements with dates, scope, and renewal cycles. PA oversight is governed by NRS 630.271 and must be available for Board inspection.

  • Document competencies: Nevada requires providers to practice within documented competency. Maintain training checklists tied to protocols, signed by the medical director, to meet expectations under NAC 630 (unprofessional conduct/competency).

  • Update protocols immediately: Any new treatment—PDO threads, RF microneedling, GLP-1 prescribing—must be reflected in written protocols and delegation documents to maintain compliance with NAC 630 supervision standards.

  • PMP diligence: Nevada law (NRS 453.164) requires prescribers to check the Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) before initiating or refilling Schedule II–IV controlled substances (including phentermine). Keep query documentation for audits.

Program-Specific Spotlight (Nevada 2025 – Verified)

Medspas (Injectables, Energy Devices, Skin Procedures)

  • Injectables (Botox®, fillers, threads) are medical procedures under Nevada law and require oversight by a Nevada-licensed physician (MD/DO). Protocols must include dosing, documentation, and adverse-event management. 
  • Lasers, IPL, RF, and similar devices affecting living tissue qualify as medical devices and may only be operated by licensed clinicians (MD/DO, APRN, PA, RN) under physician-approved protocols. Maintain laser safety training and device logs. Via NAC 630 – Medical Practice Rules.

Telehealth

  • Telehealth is permitted under NRS 629.515–629.555 if providers meet the same standard of care as in-person visits, including identity verification, patient consent, and secure record documentation. 
  • Prescribing must follow federal DEA rules plus Nevada PMP requirements for Schedule II–IV drugs (including phentermine).

Psychiatry & Behavioral Health

  • APRNs may independently evaluate, diagnose, and prescribe psychiatric medications once they meet Nevada Full Practice Authority standards. Read NRS 632.237 – APRN Requirements.
  • PAs may provide psychiatric services under a Supervisory Agreement with a physician per NRS 630.271, defining oversight, prescribing authority, and chart-review requirements.
  • All behavioral-health prescribers must maintain DEA compliance, PMP checks, and crisis-response protocols.

Weight Loss & Wellness

  • GLP-1 medications (semaglutide, tirzepatide) may be prescribed independently by APRNs or by PAs with prescribing authority granted in their Supervisory Agreement.
  • Phentermine and other controlled substances (Schedule IV) require DEA registration, Nevada PMP queries before prescribing or refilling, and documented follow-ups per NRS 453.164.
  • IV therapy is a medical treatment requiring physician-approved protocols, staff competency records, and emergency preparedness consistent with NAC 630 supervision standards.

The Paperwork Nevada Regulators Actually Ask to See (2025)

Entity & Governance

  • Entity & Governance: Proof of physician-owned or physician-controlled entity and MSO contracts showing no clinical authority.

  • Licenses & Registrations: Current MD/DO, APRN, PA, RN licenses, DEA registration (if applicable), and Nevada PMP enrollment.

  • Supervisory/Delegation Agreements: Signed PA Supervisory Agreements (required under NRS 630) and internal delegation/standing orders for APRNs, RNs, and support staff.

  • Clinical Protocols: Updated protocols for injectables, lasers, IV therapy, and weight-loss medications with consents and complication procedures.

  • Scope Matrix: Clear task list showing who may perform each procedure, tied to Nevada scope rules and documented competencies.

  • Device Files: Laser safety training, operator credentials, maintenance logs, and emergency procedures.

  • Quality Assurance: Chart-review logs, QA meeting notes, incident reports, and documentation of corrective actions.

  • Prescribing Compliance: PMP query records, controlled-substance prescribing documentation, and e-prescribing procedures.

  • Marketing Compliance: Internal approvals confirming truthful advertising and proper use of licensure titles.
  • CSPMP query logs, e-prescribing procedures, and controlled-substance inventory or waste logs.

  • Document PDMP check frequency (every new prescription and at least every 90 days) for Schedule II–IV drugs.

Avoid These Common Nevada Mistakes (2025)

  • Using “medical director” as a title without real physician control, which violates Nevada’s Corporate Practice of Medicine enforcement standards.

  • Not updating supervisory or delegation documents when adding new services, devices, or clinical staff.

  • Poor QA documentation, including missing chart reviews, competency records, or incident follow-up notes.

  • Allowing unlicensed personnel to perform medical procedures, such as injections, IV therapy, or laser/IPL use—restricted to licensed clinicians only.

  • Failing to perform Nevada PMP checks before prescribing or refilling Schedule II–IV controlled substances.

Step-by-Step: Building a Defensible Nevada Setup (30/60/90 Plan)

Days 1–30: Foundation

  • Confirm the practice structure keeps all medical decision-making under a Nevada-licensed physician to satisfy CPOM enforcement.
  • Confirm all provider licenses, DEA registrations, and Nevada PMP enrollments are active.
  • Draft or update Supervisory Agreements for PAs and written clinical protocols for injectables, devices, and IV therapy.

Days 31–60: QA in Motion

  • Begin documented QA meetings and chart reviews to demonstrate ongoing physician oversight.
  • Run a mock compliance review using Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners (NSBME) and Board of Nursing standards.
  • Review marketing content to ensure titles reflect licensure and no misleading claims appear.

Days 61–90: Harden & Scale

  • Complete competency sign-offs for injectors, device operators, and IV therapy personnel.
  • Ensure clinical and administrative records can be produced promptly for regulatory audits.
  • Update all protocols and supervisory documents before offering new procedures or expanding services.

FAQs

Can a non-physician own a Nevada clinic?

Yes, but they cannot control clinical decisions. Physicians must retain clinical authority.

Only a Nevada-licensed MD/DO in good standing.

No. Nevada grants Full Practice Authority to APRNs once requirements are met.

Yes. PAs must practice under a written Supervisory Agreement with a physician.

Yes. Both require physician oversight and protocols.

Yes, if it meets the standard of care and follows DEA + Nevada PMP rules.

How Medical Director Co. Fits into Nevada Compliance

Nevada’s regulatory environment requires clear physician oversight, structured delegation, and strict adherence to CPOM and PMP rules. Medical Director Co. provides end-to-end compliance support to help Nevada medspas and weight-loss clinics operate safely, legally, and efficiently.

  • Nevada-Licensed Medical Directors
    We match clinics with actively licensed Nevada MDs/DOs who have experience in aesthetics, telehealth, psychiatry, and weight management, ensuring physician-led oversight that satisfies state supervision and CPOM enforcement expectations.

  • Customized Supervisory Agreements & Protocols
    We create Nevada-specific Supervisory Agreements for PAs and clinical protocols for injectables, devices, telehealth, and weight-loss medications, aligned with NSBME and Board of Nursing requirements.

  • Quality Assurance (QA) Systems
    We provide templates and workflows for chart reviews, competency evaluations, incident documentation, and ongoing physician oversight—meeting NSBME audit expectations.

  • Laser & Energy Device Compliance
    We supply device protocols, operator training standards, and safety policies so clinics meet Nevada’s requirements for medical-grade laser/IPL/RF use under physician-approved supervision.

  • CPOM-Safe MSO Structure Review
    We review Management Services Organization (MSO) agreements to help ensure administrative services do not cross into prohibited clinical control.

  • Regulatory Monitoring & Proactive Guidance
    We track updates from the Nevada State Board of Medical Examiners, Board of Nursing, Board of Pharmacy, and PMP program, providing policy alerts and operational adjustments before issues arise.

Areas We Serve

Medical Director Co. provides statewide medical director and compliance support across Nevada’s major population centers and growing healthcare markets. 

We work statewide, including:

Nevada Resources & References

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