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Announcements
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7/25/2025 - The 10/31/2025 renewal cycle has opened and notice was sent on this day to the email address on file with your primary license. Please remember to renew your licenses in the order received (Example: Primary MD, then CSR-MD, then ePrescribing Waiver (if applicable)). If you obtained your Indiana Medical License via the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, you must renew your license at https://imlcc.com/renew/ and cannot access a renewal with the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana.
Receipt Requests: Please allow up to one business day for your receipt for payment to be received following the completion of your renewal to the email address on file with your license(s).
10/17/2023 - Top Ten Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) for Physician [Medical Doctor (MD) and Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (DO) License Renewals
7/5/2023 - Interstate Medical Licensure Compact Implemented and Live in Indiana
Effective Immediately: Licensure by reciprocity is available to applicants. For more information regarding the requirements for this license type, as well as directions on how to apply, please refer to the “Information Regarding Reciprocity” section under Application Instructions.
Interstate Medical Licensure Compact (IMLC)
For information on how to apply for a physician license through the compact or other general customer service inquires related to your application, please visit the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact Commission's (IMLCC) website at imlcc.org or contact the IMLCC at inquiry@imlcc.net.
If you have applied or obtained a physician license through the compact to practice in the state of Indiana and are inquiring about the status of your license, please contact PLA's staff at imlc@pla.in.gov.
- Statutes & Rules
- Board Approved Psychiatrists & Addictionologists
BOARD APPROVED PSYCHIATRISTS* by City, Name revised: 02.22.2016
City
Specialty Name
Practitioner and Phone #
Notes/Others
Anderson
Psychiatrist
Andrew Skinner, M.D.
765-646-8444ASAM Certified
Bloomington
Psychiatrist
Joel Griffith, M.D.
812-353-3450Carmel
Psychiatrist
Christopher D. Bojrab, M.D.
317-843-9922ASAM Certified
Carmel
Psychiatrist
Ned Masbaum, M.D.
317-846-7727Danville
Psychiatrist
Gabe Gachaw, M.D.
317-272-2190Ft. Wayne
Psychiatrist
Prevesh Rustagi, M.D.
260-484-1312Indianapolis
Psychiatrist
Judith Cecil, M.D.
317-355-5009Indianapolis
Psychiatrist
Elizabeth Cunningham, M.D.
317-621-6090Indianapolis
Psychiatrist
Anne Gilbert, M.D.
317-329-7300Indianapolis
Psychiatrist
Tracy D. Gunter, M.D.
317-963-7300Indianapolis
Psychiatrist
P. Ryan Moe, M.D.
317-788-6560ASAM Certified
Indianapolis
Psychiatrist
George F. Parker, M.D.
317-278-4120Indianapolis
Psychiatrist
Amy K. Ricke, M.D.
317-843-9922Lafayette
Psychiatrist
Nizar El-Khalili, M.D.
317-448-4535added quals. w/substance abuse & addiction medicine
Louisville, KY
Psychiatrist
Daniel Hackman, M.D.
502-509-3708Mishawaka
Psychiatrist
David Sonego, M.D.
574-271-8222South Bend
Psychiatrist
Kearn Hinchman, D.O.
574-258-6316*This list represents individuals whom the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana has recognized as service providers for Board mandated evaluations. The provision of this list does not in any way imply that individuals may not choose an alternate to provide similar services with Board approval. The Board does not guarantee your satisfaction with the services provided by any these practitioners.
- Physician Assessment and Remedial Education Programs
- High Breast Density Information
This page is being provided as an educational resource on high breast density, pursuant to 844 IAC 16. The Board does not make any claims with regard to these links. Please consult with a healthcare provider to discuss treatment and evaluation that is appropriate for you.
- LCME Standards
Standards for Accreditation of Medical Education Programs Leading to M.D. Degree
To obtain information concerning the LCME Standards please visit the LCME website. LCME standards can be found here http://lcme.org/publications/.
- Office Based Procedures
The information below is provided as a resource only. This does not constitute legal advice. For assistance in interpreting and applying this rule please consult with private counsel.
Accrediting Agencies
- AAAASF (QuadASF) – American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities, Inc.
- AAAHC (TripleAHC) – Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care, Inc.
- JC – Joint Commission
- HFAP – Health Facilities Accreditation Program
Frequently Asked Questions
- Question - What type of accreditation is needed to perform procedures that require anesthesia in an office-based setting?
- Answer - A physician may not perform or supervise a procedure that requires anesthesia in an office-based setting unless the office-based setting is accredited by an accreditation agency approved by the board.
- Question - What is the purpose of the accreditation?
- Because sedation is a continuum, it is not always possible to predict how a patient will respond. Physicians administering sedation must be able to rescue a patient whose level of sedation becomes deeper than initially intended. Physicians administering anesthesia, or supervising or directing the administration of anesthesia, must be knowledgeable about the risks and the interventions required for correcting any adverse physiological consequences that may occur.
- Question - What accrediting bodies are approved by the Medical Licensing Board?
- Answer -The following have been approved by the Board to offer this accreditation:
- (QuadASF) – American Association for Accreditation of Ambulatory Surgery Facilities, Inc.
- (TripleAHC) – Accreditation Association for Ambulatory Health Care, Inc.
- Joint Commission
- (HFAP) Health Facilities Accreditation Program
- Answer -The following have been approved by the Board to offer this accreditation:
- Question - What is considered an “Office-based Setting?”
- Answer -Office based setting means any facility, clinic, center, office or other setting where procedures are performed that require anesthesia, which includes the following types: moderate sedation/analgesia, deep sedation/analgesia, general anesthesia or regional anesthesia. This term does NOT include a hospital operated by the federal government or a setting licensed under IC 16-21-2 as a hospital, ambulatory surgical center, abortion clinic or birthing center.
- Question - How do I know if I need this accreditation?
- Answer -If your office based setting described above is administering moderate sedation/analgesia, deep sedation/analgesia, general anesthesia, or regional anesthesia, you will need to be accredited. Accreditation is not required for the administration of local anesthesia, topical anesthesia, superficial nerve blocks, or minimal sedation/anxiolysis.
- Question - What is the definition of the above types of anesthesia or sedation?
- Answers -
- “moderate sedation/analgesia" (also sometimes called "conscious sedation") means a drug induced depression of consciousness during which patients respond purposefully to verbal commands, either alone or accompanied by light tactile stimulation.
The following are conditions that a patient under moderate sedation/analgesia may experience:- No interventions are required to maintain a patent airway, and spontaneous ventilation is adequate.
- Cardiovascular function is usually maintained.
- “deep sedation/analgesia" means a drug-induced depression of consciousness during which patients cannot be easily aroused but respond purposefully following repeated or painful stimulation. For purposes of this rule, reflex withdrawal from a painful stimulus is not considered a purposeful response.
The following are conditions that a patient under deep sedation/analgesia may experience:- The ability to independently maintain ventilatory function may be impaired.
- Patients may require assistance in maintaining a patent airway, and spontaneous ventilation may be inadequate.
- Cardiovascular function is usually maintained.
- "general anesthesia" means a drug-induced loss of consciousness during which patients are not arousable, even by pain stimulation.
The following are conditions that a patient under general anesthesia may experience:- The ability to independently maintain ventilatory function is often impaired.
- Patients often require assistance in maintaining a patent airway, and positive pressure ventilation may be required because of depressed spontaneous ventilation or drug-induced depression of neuromuscular function.
- Cardiovascular function may be impaired.
- "regional anesthesia" means the administration of anesthetic agents to a patient to interrupt nerve impulses without the loss of consciousness and includes the following:
- Major conduction blocks, such as:
(A) epidural;
(B) spinal; and
(C) caudal; - Peripheral nerve blocks, such as:
(A) brachial;
(B) lumbar plexus;
(C) peribulbar; and
(D) retrobulbar; - Intravenous regional anesthesia, such as Bier blocks.
Notwithstanding section 2 of this rule, a superficial nerve block or application of a local anesthetic agent in which the total dosage administered exceeds the recommended maximum dosage per body weight described in the manufacturer's package insert shall be considered regional anesthesia for purposes of this rule.
- Major conduction blocks, such as:
- “moderate sedation/analgesia" (also sometimes called "conscious sedation") means a drug induced depression of consciousness during which patients respond purposefully to verbal commands, either alone or accompanied by light tactile stimulation.
- Answers -
- Question - Do I need accreditation if I am administering local anesthesia, topical anesthesia, superficial nerve blocks or minimal sedation/anxiolysis?
- Answer - No, accreditation is not required. Those are defined as the following:
- "local anesthesia" means a transient and reversible loss of sensation in a circumscribed portion of the body produced by:
- a local anesthetic agent; or
- cooling a circumscribed area of the skin.
(The term includes subcutaneous infiltration of an agent.)
- “topical anesthesia" means a transient and reversible loss of sensation to a circumscribed area produced by an anesthetic agent applied directly or by spray to the skin or mucous membranes.
- "superficial nerve block" means an agent placed in the proximity of any nerve or group of nerves outside of the vertebral canal to produce a loss of sensation in an anatomic or circumscribed area. The term is limited to the following blocks:
- ankle;
- metacarpal;
- digit; and
- paracervical;
- "minimal sedation/anxiolysis" means a drug-induced state during which a patient responds normally to verbal commands. Although cognitive function and coordination may be impaired, ventilatory and cardiovascular functions are usually not affected.
- "local anesthesia" means a transient and reversible loss of sensation in a circumscribed portion of the body produced by:
- Answer - No, accreditation is not required. Those are defined as the following:
- Question - What else is required of a physician?
- Answers -
- A physician who performs a procedure that requires anesthesia in an office-based setting, or who directs or supervises the administration of anesthesia in an office-based setting, must have:
- Admitting privileges at a nearby hospital;
- A transfer agreement with another practitioner who has admitting privileges at a nearby hospital;
- An emergency transfer agreement with a nearby hospital.
- Agreements with local emergency medical services (EMS) for the purposes of transfer of patients to the hospital in case of an emergency.
- Answers -
- Indiana State Medical Association Physician Assistance Program (ISMAPAP, Impaired Physicians Program)
- Additional Links
- Malpractice Claims - directs to Indiana Department of Insurance
- DocInfo.org - maintained by Federation of State Medical Boards
- Medicare/Medicaid/Federal health care program Exclusion List look-up - directs to U.S. Health & Human Services, Office of Inspector General
