Nevada — Good Faith Exam
Who can perform the good faith exam in Nevada, whether an RN can, the telehealth nuance, and why the GFE gates every injectable treatment — from Nevada board and statutory sources, reviewed by Faisal Darwiche, NP.
Last reviewed 2026-06-27 · Faisal Darwiche, NP. General guidance, not legal advice — confirm with your Nevada board and counsel.
In Nevada, before any aesthetic treatment a Good Faith Exam — history, appropriate exam, diagnosis, treatment plan — must be performed by a provider who can diagnose and order: a physician, an NP/APRN, or a PA, who establishes a bona fide patient relationship before any order is written. An RN may collect history and assist but may NOT perform the GFE or generate the order. Because Nevada grants NPs full practice authority, a qualified NP can perform the GFE and order independently. Confirm your GFE workflow with a Nevada healthcare attorney.
Sources: Nevada State Board of Nursing — Aesthetic Practice Advisory Decision (01/17/2025; bona fide relationship before order) · American Med Spa Association — Good Faith Exams: The Medical Spa Widow-Maker · Verified 2026-06-26.
The GFE isn't paperwork — it's the legal hinge of the whole treatment. It establishes the patient relationship, the diagnosis, the plan, and the order that makes the injection a delegated medical act instead of unlicensed practice. In Nevada, skipping or shortcutting it is the single most common compliance failure for a new med spa. Build the exam into your patient flow from day one — it protects the patient, the injector, and the owner.
Many states allow the GFE to be performed by compliant synchronous (live audiovisual) telehealth, which is why per-patient telehealth-GFE and medical-director services have become a standard way to source the exam and order before an RN injects. Whether Nevadapermits a telehealth-only GFE with no prior in-person visit — and under what conditions — should be confirmed with the Nevada board and your healthcare attorney before you build your protocol around it.
The free 17-question assessment returns a Nevada-specific plan: how to source the GFE and orders for your credential, your medical-director path, and your exact next action. 7 minutes, no card. Built by Faisal Darwiche, NP.
In Nevada the good faith exam must be done by a provider who can diagnose and order treatment — a physician, nurse practitioner, or physician assistant. The exam establishes the treatment plan and the order for the product before any injectable is administered.
No. An RN in Nevada can gather history and assist, and can administer injectables under a valid order, but cannot perform the GFE or write the treatment order — that is the practice of medicine. The exam and order come from a physician, NP, or PA.
In many states a GFE can be done by compliant synchronous (audiovisual) telehealth, which is why per-patient telehealth-GFE services are common. The exact Nevada rule and any in-person requirement should be confirmed with the Nevada board and your healthcare attorney.
Treating without a valid GFE is one of the most common ways a Nevada med spa draws enforcement — it means treating without an order, i.e. the unlicensed practice of medicine. Every patient needs a documented exam, plan, and order before their first treatment.