NC Medical Board
Back to Original Position Statement

2.1.3: The Retired Physician/Licensee

Adopted Jan 1997  | Amended Jan 2025

The retirement of a licensee is defined by the Board as the total and complete cessation of the practice of medicine and/or surgery by the licensee in any form or setting. According to the Board’s definition, the retired licensee is not required to maintain a currently registered license and SHALL NOT:

The Board is aware that a number of licensees consider themselves “retired,” but still hold a currently registered medical license (full, volunteer, or limited) and provide professional medical and/or surgical services to patients on a regular or occasional basis. Such licensees customarily serve the needs of patients, nursing home residents, free clinics, emergency rooms, community health programs, etc. These licensees may also be in a supervisory role for physician assistants and nurse practitioners. The Board commends those licensees for their willingness to continue service following “retirement,” but it recognizes such service is not the “complete cessation of the practice of medicine” and therefore must be joined with an undiminished awareness of professional responsibility. That responsibility means that such licensees SHOULD:

The Board also reminds “retired” licensees with currently registered licenses that all federal and state laws and rules relating to the practice of medicine and/or surgery apply to them, that the position statements of the Board are as relevant to them as to licensees in full and regular practice, and that they continue to be subject to the risks of liability for any medical and/or surgical acts they perform.

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