State Good Faith Exam Requirements: Where States Differ

Table of Contents

Every state requires some version of a pre-treatment provider exam before a patient receives an injectable, laser treatment, or other prescription-based aesthetic service. The details, who can perform it, whether telehealth counts, and how often it must be renewed, come from state medical and nursing board rules that vary considerably. Treating one state’s good faith exam standard as universal is one of the most common compliance mistakes in med spa operations.

Key takeaways

  • California ties its requirement to an “appropriate prior examination” standard under Business and Professions Code Section 2242, not the term good faith exam. (Jump to Section)
  • Texas has detailed, recently reorganized rules governing how physicians delegate aesthetic treatments and what a telemedicine exam must include. (Jump to Section)
  • Nursing boards in states including Arkansas, Kentucky, and Arizona have issued guidance clarifying exactly what a registered nurse can and cannot do during this exam. (Jump to Section)

How Individual States Frame the Requirement

Good faith exam rules differ by state in three specific ways: who can perform the exam, whether telehealth satisfies it, and how delegation works. California, Texas, and Florida each illustrate one of these differences clearly. The statute language and conditions attached to each state’s requirement are not interchangeable.

  • California: Business and Professions Code Section 2242 requires an “appropriate prior examination” rather than a good faith exam, and it permits telehealth methods such as a self-screening tool or questionnaire as long as the provider meets the applicable standard of care.
  • Texas: A physician, physician assistant, or advanced practice registered nurse must conduct the exam before a nonsurgical cosmetic procedure can be delegated, under rules reorganized in January 2025 from Medical Board Rule 193.17 into Texas Administrative Code Sections 169.25 through 169.29.
  • Florida: The provider conducting a telehealth-based evaluation must also hold prescribing authority for the treatment involved, a stricter pairing than states that allow the exam and the prescription to come from two different providers.

The practical difference across these three states comes down to where a policy is most likely to fail an audit. California accepts remote evaluation methods that Texas and Florida do not, Texas ties the exam directly to a delegation record rather than the patient chart alone, and Florida requires the same provider to both examine and prescribe. Confirm the current state-specific rules before assuming a mechanic that works in one state will hold up in another.

Why Nursing Board Guidance Matters Here

Good faith exam requirements intersect directly with nurse practice acts in a way many practices overlook. Arkansas, Kentucky, and Arizona have each issued nursing board guidance addressing this intersection since 2025. Each state draws its own line between what a nurse can document and what a nurse can decide.

  • Arkansas: The Arkansas State Board of Nursing clarified in writing in 2025 that “good faith exam” does not appear in the state’s Nurse Practice Act, and it flagged cases where exams were not being properly conducted or followed up on.
  • Kentucky: Kentucky’s Board of Nursing allows a registered nurse to perform cosmetic and dermatological procedures only within a medically prescribed plan of care that a qualified provider has already established, and only after a good faith physical exam has been conducted ahead of each treatment.
  • Arizona: Arizona’s nursing board issued guidance in January 2025 permitting telemedicine for the initial exam in some circumstances, while still requiring that a licensed provider, not the treating nurse, perform and sign off on it.

The distinction across all three states comes down to this: a nurse can carry out or document the procedure, but a nurse cannot establish the patient-nurse relationship or decide whether the patient is a candidate for treatment. That determination has to trace back to a physician, physician assistant, or nurse practitioner with prescribing authority. Med spa owners hiring RN-heavy teams should read how telehealth good faith exams work before assuming a nurse can close this gap internally.

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How to Confirm Your State’s Current Requirement

State rules change often enough that a policy written two or three years ago may already be outdated. Texas is a direct example, since the rule number practices cited for years no longer exists in that form. Confirming a state’s current requirement takes a specific sequence of checks.

  • Check your state medical board’s website: Search specifically for advisory opinions or position statements on aesthetic procedures, cosmetic injectables, or delegated medical acts.
  • Check your state nursing board’s website: Look for the same category of guidance, since several of the clarifications covered above, including Arkansas and Kentucky, came from nursing boards rather than medical boards.
  • If neither board has issued dedicated med spa guidance: Fall back to the general practitioner-patient relationship and delegation rules in that state’s medical and nursing practice acts, since those underlying rules still apply.
  • Set a review cadence: Revisit this at least once a year, since board guidance in this space has shifted multiple times in the past two years alone.

A check that stops at the medical board is incomplete, since nursing board guidance can be more specific than medical board rules for practices that rely on RN-performed procedures. Cross-referencing both boards is what separates an audit-ready policy from a rule inherited from a template.

How Medical Director Co. Keeps Placements Aligned With Current State Rules

Rule numbers get renumbered, and board guidance changes mid-year. A compliance policy that was accurate last year can be wrong today. Medical Director Co. places supervising physicians and medical directors who track state rule changes as part of ongoing oversight.

FAQ

Do all states use the term good faith exam?

Most states regulate the underlying requirement through practitioner-patient relationship or examination language instead of that exact phrase. California calls it an “appropriate prior examination” under its Business and Professions Code. The requirement works the same way in practice regardless of which label a state’s statute uses.

Which states have issued specific med spa guidance?

California, Texas, Florida, Arizona, Arkansas, and Kentucky have issued board guidance, statutes, or advisory opinions on aesthetic and cosmetic procedures. States without dedicated guidance apply their general delegation and practitioner-patient relationship rules instead.

Does my state allow telehealth for this exam?

Most states permit some form of telehealth for the exam, but the technology, documentation, and prescribing-authority requirements differ. California allows asynchronous tools such as questionnaires. Texas and Florida permit telehealth but attach specific delegation and prescribing-authority conditions.

What if my state hasn’t issued specific med spa guidance?

Check the general practitioner-patient relationship and delegation rules in your state’s medical and nursing practice acts. The underlying exam requirement still applies without aesthetics-specific language, since it comes from the state’s core prescribing and delegation law.

How often do state requirements change?

Annual review is the minimum. Texas reorganized its entire delegation framework in January 2025, and Arizona and Arkansas issued new nursing board guidance the same year. A policy accurate two years ago may not reflect current board expectations.

Confirming Your State’s Rule Before an Audit Does It for You

State good faith exam requirements share a common purpose, but not a common rulebook. California, Texas, Florida, Arkansas, and Kentucky each define who can perform the exam, whether telehealth qualifies, and how delegation works differently enough that a policy built for one state will not automatically satisfy another. Confirm your specific state’s current rule before your next audit reviews it for you.

One outdated policy is all it takes.

Talk to Medical Director Co. about keeping your oversight current, before a board audit catches it.

bolton-harris

Bolton M. Harris, J.D.

is a seasoned attorney with a formidable background in criminal law and a focus on healthcare law and compliance. As the in-house legal counsel at Medical Director Co., Harris brings a unique blend of prosecutorial experience and regulatory expertise to support healthcare professionals across Texas. Her career spans roles as a prosecutor in multiple counties and now as a trusted advisor on the legal intricacies of medical practice operations.

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