Kansas healthcare marketing operates under Board of Healing Arts rules and the Consumer Protection Act, with federal rules as the dominant compliance layer.
State-level overview
Kansas healthcare marketing compliance operates under the Kansas State Board of Healing Arts (BHA) and the Kansas Consumer Protection Act (KCPA). Standard physician advertising rules apply.
Kansas BHA enforces K.A.R. 100 advertising provisions covering deceptive advertising, specialty claims, supervision representations, and testimonial standards.
Kansas AG uses KCPA authority. Healthcare marketing enforcement has been moderate.
Enforcement focus
Kansas telehealth rules apply to providers marketing to KS residents.
Kansas BHA enforces specialty-claim standards.
KS AG has KCPA authority for compounded medication marketing.
Patterns we flag in Kansas
Nurse-injector independence representations
Why: Kansas BHA supervision rules apply.
Compounded GLP-1 brand-equivalence claims
Why: KCPA authority.
Outcome guarantees on medical services
Why: BHA rules and KCPA both apply.
Specialty misrepresentation
Why: BHA specialty-claim enforcement.
Telehealth advertising without KS-licensure clarity
Why: Kansas telehealth rules apply to marketing to KS residents.
By specialty
By specialty in Kansas
Specialty rules stack on top of state rules. Find the specialty-specific framework that applies to your practice.
Disclaimer
This summary reflects general patterns in Kansas healthcare marketing enforcement; it is not legal advice. For state-specific guidance on your practice, consult a Kansas-licensed healthcare marketing attorney.
RegenCompliance applies federal FDA and FTC rules plus the most-enforced state patterns automatically. Kansas-specific language is part of the rule set.
Other state guides
See allCalifornia healthcare marketing sits under the strictest state-level enforcement environment in the country - Medical Board of California rules, Business & Professions Code §17500 false advertising authority, and active AG consumer protection.
Read state guideTexas has an active Medical Board with specific rules for medical advertising, and the DTPA gives consumers and the state AG independent enforcement authority over deceptive healthcare marketing.
Read state guideFlorida's regulatory environment is defined by the Board of Medicine, FDUTPA, and an AG office that has been active on healthcare marketing - particularly in the fast-growing med spa, weight-loss, and regen categories.
Read state guide