Purpose


The Board Clinical Social Work, Marriage and Family Therapy, and Mental Health Counseling (hereinafter the “Board”) is statutorily mandated to adopt rules to implement and enforce the provisions of Chapter 491, Florida Statutes. Pursuant to this authority, the Board has promulgated rules setting forth the guidelines and requirements for clinical social work, marriage and family therapy, and mental health counseling interns while completing internship hours. Rule 64B4-2.002, Florida Administrative Code, requires interns to complete clinical internship hours by face-to-face psychotherapy with client. It distinguishes between face-to-face psychotherapy and face-to-face by electronic methods for sessions with the intern’s Qualified Supervisor. The rule currently does not allow face-to-face psychotherapy by electronic methods with clients. Additionally, the Rule also limits the number of face-to-face supervision sessions between registered interns and their Qualified Supervisors to 50% of the total number of supervision sessions by electronic methods. The present rule also supersedes emergency rule 64B4ER20-20, F.A.C., which limits face-to-face psychotherapy by electronic methods to clients who had an existing psychotherapeutic relationship established with a registered intern prior to the effective date of the rule and did not clarify that clinical hours obtained by electronic methods would count toward an interns experience requirements. On March 1, 2020, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis issued Executive Order Number 20-51 which directed the State Health Officer and Surgeon General, Dr. Scott Rivkees, to declare a public health emergency pursuant to the spread of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). On March 9, 2020, Governor DeSantis issued Executive Order Number 20-52 (Emergency Management - COVID-19 Public Health Emergency) and officially declared that a state of emergency exists in the State of Florida. COVID-19 is a severe acute respiratory illness that can spread among humans through respiratory transmission and presents with symptoms similar to those of influenza. As of April 1, 2020, there are 6,955 cases of COVID-19 in the State of Florida, with the number rising exponentially. The Center for Disease Control (“CDC”) recommends mitigation measures to combat the spread of COVID-19 such as staying home when sick, keeping away from others who are sick, staying home when a household member is sick with respiratory disease symptoms, and for those who are at higher risk, including older adults and those who have serious chronic medical conditions, to avoid non-essential air travel and to avoid crowds as much as possible. Many communities have enacted stay at home orders requiring individuals to work form home whenever possible, to closer non-essential business, and to limit travel outside the home to essential needs only. Since the issuance of the Executive Order and the declaration of a public health emergency by the State Health Officer and Surgeon General Dr. Rivkees, the Board office has received numerous calls and emails from registered interns and qualified supervisors concerned about the dangers of individual therapy and supervision sessions related to COVID-19. Furthermore, since emergency rule 64B4ER20-20, F.A.C., was enacted, the Board office has received numerous calls and emails from registered interns, domestic violence shelters, and rape treatment centers stating that they are seeing an increase in new clients and cannot provide services to these new patients under social distancing guidelines without registered interns being able to conduct psychotherapy sessions via electronic means. Inquiries have been made as to whether there are alternative methods by which clients can receive a continuation of therapy and allowing the expansion of supervision by electronic means thereby eliminating the possibility of contracting or spreading COVID-19. Many registered interns, Qualified Supervisors, and clients of registered interns are included as part of the particularly vulnerable population impacted by COVID-19 as identified by the CDC. As the current rule requires that all psychotherapy sessions between a registered intern and their existing and new clients take place face-to-face at the same location and since qualified supervisor sessions are limited to only 50% of meeting via electronic means, this emergency change will ensure that Florida’s citizens continue to have access to mental health care professionals and are not denied services or placed in unnecessary risk. This revision will ensure that a particularly vulnerable population, e.g. victims of domestic violence and sexual battery, are able to receive services regardless of when they were victimized. This revision is essential during this healthcare emergency. Accordingly, the Board, by emergency rule, allows for the continuation of services to clients of registered interns so that necessary and helpful psychotherapeutic services may be established and are not interrupted. The Board finds that these actions are a measured regulatory approach that helps to mitigate the threat of exposure to COVID-19 and to protect the registered interns and their clients from exposure to COVID-19