Georgia

Georgia Collaborating Physician Jobs – Flexible & High-Paying Opportunities

Georgia has some of the most demanding collaboration requirements in the country — a 4-APRN cap, a 50-mile proximity rule, Board-filed Nurse Protocol Agreements, specialty matching, and strict chart review requirements. These same demands mean Georgia’s qualified collaborating physicians are among the most sought-after and best-compensated in the Southeast — across Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, and beyond.

⏱ Get started in 24–48 hours ✅ We handle GCMB filing through ThoughtSpan 💰 4-APRN cap creates premium per-physician demand 📋 Permanent — no independence pathway for Georgia NPs
4 APRNs
Maximum number of APRNs a physician may have active Nurse Protocol Agreements with at any one time
50 miles
Physician’s principal place of practice must be within Georgia or within 50 miles of the Georgia practice site
100% / 10%
Chart review required — 100% co-signature for controlled substance patients; 10% review for all other patients annually
Georgia’s Chart Review Requirements

Two-Tier Chart Review — the Most Demanding in the Series

Georgia distinguishes between controlled substance patients and all other patients — with very different review obligations for each. Understanding both tiers is essential before entering a Georgia collaboration.

Georgia chart review obligations under Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 360-5-.02:

All Patients — Non-Controlled

10% Annual Chart Review

The collaborating physician or another designated physician must review and sign at least 10% of all patient records for patients who did NOT receive controlled substance prescriptions. This review must occur at least annually. We provide a structured documentation framework for this requirement.

Controlled Substance Patients

100% Review & Co-Signature Required

The collaborating physician or another designated physician must review and co-sign 100% of patient records for any patient who receives a controlled substance prescription under the Nurse Protocol Agreement. This is one of the most demanding chart review requirements of any state in this series.

Why Georgia

Georgia’s Strict Requirements Create High Per-Physician Demand and Premium Compensation

Georgia is a restricted practice state with no NP independence pathway and some of the most demanding collaboration requirements in the country. Every APRN who prescribes must have a written Nurse Protocol Agreement under OCGA 43-34-25, signed by both parties and filed with the Georgia Composite Medical Board (GCMB) within 30 days via the ThoughtSpan Licensing Gateway. The APRN does not have prescriptive authority until the GCMB completes its review — a process that averages approximately 30 business days.

The combination of Georgia’s 4-APRN cap, 50-mile proximity rule, specialty matching requirement, and 100% chart co-signature for controlled substance patients means qualified Georgia physicians are genuinely scarce. These constraints drive per-physician demand — and compensation — significantly higher than most states in the series.

Georgia’s strict requirements are a feature, not a bug, for physicians seeking collaboration income. The 4-APRN cap limits supply, the demanding compliance structure raises the bar for who qualifies, and the result is that Georgia physicians who meet all requirements are among the most sought-after and highest-compensated collaborating physicians in the Southeast.

Apply Now

Georgia State Requirements

Written Nurse Protocol Agreement must be submitted to the GCMB within 30 days of signing via ThoughtSpan Licensing Gateway (as of July 2025). APRN does not have prescriptive authority until the Board approves — processing averages ~30 business days. Any amendments must also be filed within 30 days. OCGA 43-34-25; Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 360-5-.02

Physician and APRN must have comparable specialties. Physician’s principal place of practice must be within Georgia or within 50 miles of the Georgia practice location where the protocol is used. Maximum 4 APRNs per physician at one time; maximum 8 combined APRNs and PAs. OCGA 43-34-25; Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 360-5-.02

100% review and co-signature of all patient records for patients receiving controlled substance prescriptions. 10% review and co-signature of all other patient records annually. Both the physician and the APRN must document all chart reviews. Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 360-5-.02; Zivian Health

Physician must notify GCMB within 10 working days of protocol termination. APRN must notify GCMB within 7 days if the physician dies or departs unexpectedly. 30-day advance written notice required for termination without cause. Protocol does not transfer when physician leaves a practice — it terminates. OCGA 43-34-25

Physician must ensure annual pharmacology training documentation if prescribing is delegated. Physician generally may not be employed by the APRN they supervise. Both NPs and PAs require physician collaboration (combined 8-cap). OCGA 43-34-25; OCGA 43-34-103

Your Role

What a Collaborating Physician Does in Georgia

Georgia’s physician role is among the most defined in the series. Board filing, specialty matching, chart co-signatures, proximity compliance, pharmacology training documentation — we structure and manage all of it.

File the Nurse Protocol Agreement with GCMB

Sign the Nurse Protocol Agreement and submit it to the Georgia Composite Medical Board via ThoughtSpan within 30 days. The APRN cannot prescribe until the Board completes its review. We handle the ThoughtSpan submission for you.

100% Chart Co-Signature — Controlled Substances

Review and co-sign every patient record where a controlled substance was prescribed under the Nurse Protocol. This is Georgia’s strictest requirement and the one that most clearly defines the ongoing physician role in controlled substance oversight.

10% Annual Chart Review — All Other Patients

Review and co-sign at least 10% of all non-controlled substance patient records annually. Georgia requires both parties to document these reviews. We provide a documentation system to keep this organized and audit-ready for GCMB review.

Annual Pharmacology Training Documentation

If prescribing is delegated under the Nurse Protocol, ensure and document that the APRN receives annual, scope-appropriate pharmacology training. This documentation must be maintained and is subject to GCMB audit.

Comparable Specialty & 50-Mile Compliance

Practice in a comparable specialty to the APRN and maintain your principal place of practice within Georgia or within 50 miles of the Georgia location where the protocol is used. We verify both requirements at the time of matching.

Termination Notification to GCMB

If the Nurse Protocol Agreement terminates for any reason, notify the GCMB within 10 working days. If the physician dies or departs unexpectedly, the APRN must notify within 7 days. The agreement does not transfer to another physician — it terminates. We coordinate all termination notifications.

Simple Process

Get Started in 3 Simple Steps

Many physicians in our network are matched within 24 to 48 hours — and we guide you through Georgia’s Board filing from day one.

1

Apply

Submit your credentials, Georgia license number, specialty, and principal practice location. It takes less than 2 minutes. We verify 50-mile compliance and specialty alignment before matching.

2

Get Matched

We connect you with Georgia APRNs whose specialty aligns with yours and whose practice location falls within your 50-mile radius — across Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, and statewide.

3

Start Collaborating

Begin with a fully compliant Nurse Protocol Agreement filed via ThoughtSpan, chart review documentation in place, pharmacology training tracking established, and GCMB approval coordinated.

Our Difference

A Smarter Way to Work as a Georgia Collaborating Physician

Georgia’s ThoughtSpan filing, 30-day Board processing timeline, 50-mile rule, specialty matching, two-tier chart review, pharmacology training documentation, and termination notification requirements make this one of the most administratively complex states in the series. We handle all of it.

Specialty-matched, 50-mile compliant matching

We match you only with Georgia APRNs in your comparable specialty whose practice location is within 50 miles of your principal place of practice — both verified before every introduction.

ThoughtSpan filing — we handle it

We submit your Nurse Protocol Agreement to the GCMB via the ThoughtSpan Licensing Gateway within the required 30-day window — and track the ~30-business-day approval timeline so your APRN can begin prescribing without delays.

Two-tier chart review documentation system

We provide a structured, audit-ready documentation framework for both the 100% controlled substance review and the 10% annual general patient review — keeping you compliant with Georgia’s most demanding chart requirement.

4-APRN cap drives premium compensation

Georgia’s 4-APRN cap limits how many APRNs each physician can support — creating genuine scarcity and driving per-physician compensation among the highest in the Southeast.

Termination & amendment compliance

We coordinate all GCMB notifications — termination within 10 working days, amendments within 30 days — so your compliance record with the Board is never at risk.

Permanent income — no independence pathway

Georgia has no NP independence pathway. Every Nurse Protocol Agreement is permanent for the life of the APRN’s practice in Georgia — providing stable, long-term collaboration income at the higher rates Georgia’s structure supports.

Georgia Clinics

Georgia Clinic Types We Work With

Every Georgia APRN who prescribes needs a GCMB-approved Nurse Protocol Agreement — permanently. From Atlanta’s medspa and aesthetics market to Augusta’s medical corridor and Savannah’s coastal healthcare network.

💆Medical Spas
⚖️Weight Loss Centers
💉IV Hydration
💻Telehealth Platforms
🏥Primary Care
🧠Psychiatry Practices
Specialty Clinics
🩺Wellness Centers
Is This For You?

This Opportunity Is Ideal For

🏅

Physicians with an active Georgia medical license and a principal place of practice in Georgia or within 50 miles of the APRN’s location

🎯

Physicians whose specialty is comparable to the APRN’s certification and clinical scope

💰

Those seeking premium per-physician income driven by Georgia’s strict 4-APRN cap and demanding compliance standards

📋

Physicians committed to structured chart review documentation and ongoing GCMB compliance

Your Georgia medical license must be active with the Georgia Composite Medical Board. Your principal place of practice must be within the state of Georgia or within 50 miles of the APRN’s Georgia practice location. Specialty comparability is verified before every match. Georgia generally prohibits physicians from being employed by the APRN they supervise.

Collaborating Physician Jobs in Georgia

Georgia Collaborating Physician Jobs — Premium Demand Across Atlanta, Savannah, Augusta, and the Peach State

Georgia has no NP independence pathway and some of the most demanding physician collaboration requirements in the country — a 4-APRN cap, a 50-mile proximity rule, Board approval through ThoughtSpan, and 100% chart co-signature for controlled substance patients. Together these requirements limit the pool of eligible collaborating physicians significantly, driving per-physician compensation among the highest of any Southern state. For physicians who qualify under Georgia’s framework, the Peach State offers some of the most consistently active and well-compensated collaborating physician jobs available in the Southeast — backed by one of the fastest-growing APRN workforces in the region.

Collaborating Physician Jobs With the Highest Per-Physician Compensation in the South

Georgia’s 4-APRN cap per physician (8 combined with PAs) is the single most important income driver in the state’s physician collaboration market. Because no more than 4 active Nurse Protocol Agreements can exist with any one physician at the same time, the supply of eligible physicians is structurally limited relative to Georgia’s large and growing APRN workforce. That structural scarcity — combined with ThoughtSpan Board approval, the 50-mile proximity rule, and comparable specialty requirements — drives Georgia collaborating physician jobs to some of the highest rates per-arrangement in the region.

Collaborating Physician for Nurse Practitioners — Atlanta’s Booming Medspa and Aesthetics Market

The Atlanta metropolitan area is home to one of the most active medspa and aesthetics markets in the South, and the demand for a collaborating physician for nurse practitioners who specialize in injectables, GLP-1 weight loss, body contouring, and hormone optimization is among the highest in the country. From Buckhead and Midtown to Sandy Springs, Alpharetta, and Roswell, NP-operated aesthetic and weight loss clinics generate consistent, year-round demand for physician collaborators who hold comparable specialty credentials and are within 50 miles of the practice location.

Permanent Income — No Independence Pathway in Georgia

Georgia is a restricted practice state with no experience-based or hours-based independence pathway for NPs. Every APRN in Georgia must maintain an active, GCMB-approved Nurse Protocol Agreement with a comparably specialized physician for the full duration of their Georgia practice. A physician who enters into a Georgia NPA today is entering a long-term income arrangement — not a temporary transition window. This permanence, combined with the 4-APRN cap’s income ceiling effect, makes Georgia one of the most financially attractive physician collaboration markets in the country for qualified physicians.

We Handle ThoughtSpan, Proximity Verification, and Chart Co-Signature Coordination

Georgia’s Nurse Protocol Agreement framework is the most administratively intensive NPA process in this series — ThoughtSpan gateway submission, ~30 business day Board approval, 100% chart co-signature for controlled substance patients, annual pharmacology CE requirements, and 10-working-day termination notifications. Most physicians approaching these requirements for the first time find the process daunting. We manage every element from ThoughtSpan submission through approval and into the ongoing oversight cycle — so you focus on the clinical relationship and the income.

CollaboratingPhysician.com maintains an active pipeline of collaborating physician jobs across Georgia and matches physicians with APRN practices within 24 to 48 hours. Whether you want to find collaborating physician positions in Atlanta, Augusta, Savannah, Macon, or across the Peach State, we verify comparable specialty alignment, handle ThoughtSpan NPA submissions, confirm 50-mile proximity compliance, coordinate chart co-signature documentation, and manage every arrangement from Board approval through the full collaboration period.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions — Georgia

What is the Georgia Nurse Protocol Agreement and how does it get approved?
The Nurse Protocol Agreement (NPA) is Georgia’s required written collaboration document under OCGA 43-34-25. Both the physician and APRN sign the agreement, and it must be submitted to the Georgia Composite Medical Board (GCMB) via the ThoughtSpan Licensing Gateway within 30 days of signing. As of July 2025, all GCMB submissions must be completed through ThoughtSpan — paper submissions are no longer accepted. The APRN does not have prescriptive authority until the Board completes its review, which averages approximately 30 business days. Any amendments to the agreement must also be filed within 30 days of execution.
What is the 50-mile proximity rule in Georgia?
Georgia requires that the collaborating physician’s principal place of practice be within the geographic boundaries of Georgia, or within 50 miles of the location in Georgia where the Nurse Protocol Agreement is being utilized. This means out-of-state physicians must practice within 50 miles of the Georgia practice site. The 50-mile rule is verified at the time of matching and must remain accurate throughout the life of the agreement — if the physician’s principal practice location changes, this may affect the agreement’s compliance.
Why does Georgia require 100% chart co-signature for controlled substance patients?
Georgia regulations require the collaborating physician (or another designated physician) to review and co-sign 100% of patient records for patients who receive controlled substance prescriptions under a Nurse Protocol Agreement. This is one of the most demanding chart review requirements in the country — far exceeding most states in the series. The requirement reflects Georgia’s strict approach to controlled substance oversight under the NPA model. For non-controlled substance patients, the review threshold drops to at least 10% annually, reviewed and co-signed by the physician.
What is the 4-APRN cap and how does it affect compensation?
Georgia law limits each collaborating physician to no more than 4 active Nurse Protocol Agreements at any one time (with some exemptions under the Medical Practice Act). There is also a combined cap of 8 across all APRNs and PAs. This per-physician cap limits the supply of eligible collaborating physicians relative to Georgia’s large and growing APRN workforce — driving per-physician demand and compensation significantly higher than uncapped states. Physicians who qualify for Georgia’s requirements are among the most sought-after and best-compensated in the Southeast.
What happens when a Nurse Protocol Agreement terminates in Georgia?
If the agreement terminates for any reason, the collaborating physician must notify the GCMB within 10 working days of the termination date. If the physician dies or departs the practice unexpectedly, the APRN must notify the GCMB within 7 days. Either party may terminate without cause by providing at least 30 days advance written notice to the other party. Critically, when a physician leaves a practice, the Nurse Protocol Agreement terminates — it does not transfer to another physician. A new agreement must be filed with the GCMB for the APRN’s prescribing to continue.
Is there a Georgia NP independence pathway?
No. Georgia is a restricted practice state with no experience-based or hours-based pathway to independent NP practice. Every Georgia APRN must maintain an active, GCMB-approved Nurse Protocol Agreement with a comparably specialized physician for as long as they practice in Georgia. This permanent requirement — combined with the 4-APRN cap — creates stable, long-term physician collaboration demand throughout Georgia’s large NP workforce.
How do I find a collaborating physician in Georgia — and what should APRNs look for in a Nurse Protocol Agreement partner?
For APRNs: the most reliable way to find a collaborating physician in Georgia is through a managed matching network. Georgia’s NPA framework has more qualifying conditions than almost any other state — the physician must practice in a comparable specialty, their principal practice must be within 50 miles of the Georgia practice site, they must hold an active Georgia medical license, and the NPA must be submitted through ThoughtSpan and approved by the GCMB before prescriptive authority is valid. A managed platform verifies all of these conditions before introduction. NPs who want to find collaborating physician partners quickly in Georgia will also benefit from the speed advantage — most physicians in our Georgia network are introduced within 24 to 48 hours, versus weeks of independent outreach. Searching independently — through NP groups, LinkedIn, or cold outreach to local physicians — frequently results in approaches to physicians who don’t meet the 50-mile rule, don’t hold comparable specialty credentials, or aren’t willing to take on Georgia’s controlled substance chart co-signature requirements. For physicians: if you are evaluating collaborating physician jobs in Georgia and want to understand what physician collaboration here actually demands, the honest answer is that Georgia is the most requirement-intensive state in this series. The 100% controlled substance chart co-signature obligation, ThoughtSpan Board approval cycle, and annual pharmacology CE requirement are all real obligations that take real time. A collaborative physician in Georgia earns more than in most other states — and those higher rates reflect a genuine scope of involvement that less demanding state frameworks do not require.
What does physician collaboration in Georgia involve — and what is a collaborative physician responsible for?
Physician collaboration in Georgia is governed by OCGA 43-34-25 and implemented through the Nurse Protocol Agreement (NPA) approved by the Georgia Composite Medical Board. A collaborative physician in Georgia has a more defined and demanding set of obligations than in most other states: (1) sign and file the NPA via ThoughtSpan within 30 days of execution and await GCMB approval before the APRN prescribes; (2) review and co-sign 100% of patient records where controlled substances are prescribed; (3) review and co-sign at least 10% of non-controlled substance records annually; (4) complete annual pharmacology continuing education relevant to the APRN’s practice; (5) notify the GCMB within 10 working days of any NPA termination. These obligations are more demanding than in most states — which is precisely why Georgia physician collaboration arrangements compensate at premium rates and why collaborating physician jobs in Georgia consistently attract physicians who are willing to engage at this level in exchange for the state’s above-average compensation.

Start Building Premium Income as a Georgia Collaborating Physician

Georgia APRNs need a Board-approved Nurse Protocol Agreement — permanently, with a 4-APRN cap driving per-physician demand among the highest in the Southeast. We match you, file via ThoughtSpan, manage chart review documentation, and handle GCMB compliance throughout.

Apply Now — Takes Less Than 2 Minutes

Or call us at +1 (817) 857-2726 to get started today.

Serving physicians and clinics across Georgia, including Atlanta, Augusta, Columbus, Macon, Savannah, Athens, Sandy Springs, Roswell, Johns Creek, Warner Robins, Albany, Alpharetta, Marietta, Smyrna, Valdosta, Brookhaven, Dunwoody, Peachtree City, Gainesville, Rome, and surrounding communities statewide.

Collaborating Physician Intake Form

Complete the form below to explore collaborating physician jobs with Collaborating Physician. Our team will review your information and connect you with qualified healthcare professionals in need of oversight. Start earning residual income in a flexible role—submit your details today to discover your next collaborating physician job opportunity!

Hire a Collaborating Physician Today