(a) Each person licensed to practice podiatric medicine under the provisions of section 20-54 or 20-57 who provides direct patient care services shall maintain professional liability insurance or other indemnity against liability for professional malpractice. The amount of insurance which each such person shall carry as insurance or indemnity against claims for injury or death for professional malpractice shall not be less than five hundred thousand dollars for one person, per occurrence, with an aggregate of not less than one million five hundred thousand dollars.
(b) Each insurance company which issues professional liability insurance, as defined in subdivisions (1), (6), (7), (8) and (9) of subsection (b) of section 38a-393, shall on and after January 1, 1995, render to the Commissioner of Public Health a true record of the names and addresses, according to classification, of cancellations of and refusals to renew professional liability insurance policies and the reasons for such cancellation or refusal to renew said policies for the year ending on the thirty-first day of December next preceding.
(P.A. 94-71, S. 5; P.A. 95-257, S. 12, 21, 58; P.A. 96-180, S. 69, 166.)
History: P.A. 95-257 replaced Commissioner and Department of Public Health and Addiction Services with Commissioner and Department of Public Health, effective July 1, 1995; P.A. 96-180 required addresses to be included with the record of names in Subsec. (b), effective June 3, 1996.
Structure Connecticut General Statutes
Section 20-50. - Podiatric medicine defined.
Section 20-50a. - Requirements for surgery.
Section 20-51. - Examining board: Appointment and qualifications.
Section 20-52 and 20-53. - Removals from examining board. Organization and rules.
Section 20-55. - Examinations. Fees.
Section 20-56. - List of practitioners to be filed.
Section 20-57. - Licensure without examination.
Section 20-58. - Transmittal of certificate to Department of Health Services. License.
Section 20-59. - Disciplinary action by board; grounds.
Section 20-63. - Title “Doctor” not to be used.