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Why license
the massage therapy profession?
Under U.S. law authority rests with states to regulate professions that have an
impact on the health, safety and welfare of the public. This isn’t
something that is done through national legislation.
AMTA
recognizes that state government regulation of the practice of
massage therapy is the best way to meet the needs of the public and
the massage therapy profession. Leaving massage therapy regulation
decisions to local government results in inconsistent regulation or
none at all. The association believes that state licensure is the
most effective means for the states to regulate our
profession.
State
licensure requires that only a person who holds a valid
license from the state can engage in the practice of massage
therapy or advertise to the public that they are practicing massage
therapy. It also applies criminal penalties for people who practice
without a valid massage therapy license. Professional licensure
laws establish a minimum level of competency necessary to safely and
effectively practice.
What are the
benefits of professional licensure?
AMTA believes
that the following benefits come from professional licensure:
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Protection of the
public through the estab lis hment of high standards for
entry into the profession.
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Protection of the
public through the regulation of practice and recourse to effective
disciplinary action.
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Fair and consistent
regulation applying to the whole state.
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The right of massage
therapists to define their practice, through proposed legislation
and through regulation under an
authoritative or advisory board of massage therapy.
These are
some reasons AMTA is proactively pursuing state licensure in all
states. These regulations are designed to protect the general
public by demanding accountability from the profession. They also
seek to unify the profession by providing a common governing
structure, minimum competency, culture and language.
How can we achieve fair, consistent massage therapy licensure laws?
The most
significant problem associated with professional massage therapy
licensure is the lack of consistency among the thirty-six (36)
states and District of Columbia that have some form of regulation in
place. This could be due, in part, to a lack of a centralized
government relations strategy which has left us with a patchwork of
state and city laws. The wide-ranging massage therapy regulations
have presented many challenges for therapists who relocate from one
city or state to another, for health care professionals trying to
refer patients for massage therapy, for the patients themselves, and
for third party reimbursement.
The American
Massage Therapy Association supports consistent massage
therapy licensure standards that encourage reciprocity between
states and eventually achieve overall portability of massage therapy
credentials. Portability, quite simply, means that the education
and training credentials of a licensed massage practitioner could be
more easily accepted when a practitioner moves to or opens a
location in another state. AMTA is working to improve the current
regulatory environment through the creation of a centralized
government relations strategy designed to achieve fair and
consistent licensing in all states. This is the top advocacy
priority for AMTA and it will require a long-term commitment.
The first step
in the effort to achieve consistent licensure standards is to
guarantee the inclusion of “must have” and “should have”
elements in any and all baseline massage therapy practice acts. The
association feels these necessary elements will provide consistency
and clarity to state licensure regulations. And, they form the
basis of the AMTA Government Relations policy we begin working with
on May 1, 2006.
Must Have
Elements of a Baseline Massage Therapy Practice Act
In order for the association (national or chapter) to
support massage therapy legislation, the following content and practice
conditions are must have elements of a baseline practice act:
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At least
the minimum scope of practice for massage based on a definition
of those massage procedures which are observable by the common
person (i.e. the physical action of the therapist touching the
client is observable.)
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A licensure
qualification requiring successful completion of a
professional course of study consisting of at least five hundred
hours of in-class, supervised
education authenticated by a single education provider, with content well distributed in the subjects of anatomy,
physiology, hygiene, ethics, massage theory and research, and
massage practice.
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A
licensure qualification that requires passing an examination
that has met national accreditation standards and which is
administered by a recognized body independent of the
education provider, with content that covers the subjects in a
professional course of study, as described above.
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Authority,
which may be tacit, of licensees to practice within the scope of
massage therapy practice, free from any requirement to obtain any
other occupational license.
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Powers and
duties of the massage therapy regulatory agency which are customary
for the regulation of other healthcare professions in the state.
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Disciplinary
and penalty provisions which are customary for the regulation of
other healthcare professions in the state.
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An authoritative or advisory
board of massage therapy, with a majority
comprised of massage therapists, and special provisions for the
initial appointment of qualified massage therapists as board
members whose terms will begin before any licenses have been
issued.
Should Have Elements of a Baseline
Massage Therapy Practice Act
The
association advises chapters that the following content and practice
conditions are should have elements of a baseline practice
act:
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A means of
recognizing, for the purpose of licensure, a valid license held by a
practitioner that has been granted by another state government.
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Exemption
from licensure for any person whose practice is not conducted in a
way to imply that it is the practice of massage therapy and who does
not hold out to the public that their practice is massage therapy.
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Free from any
requirement to obtain an establishment license not required of other
state licensed healthcare practitioners.
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Permission for
visiting massage therapists from other states, who may not be
licensed by the subject state, to practice massage therapy in the
context of time-limited events on a pro bono basis or in the course
of instruction.
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Waiver of
education and examination provisions for any practitioner seeking
licensure who can establish that their occupational practice began
by the date the legislation is passed.
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An effective date for
the licensure requirement which is at least one year from the time
the legislation is passed.
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Pre-emption of local
regulation that would in any way treat massage therapy differently
from local regulation of other healthcare professions.
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Inclusion of the
following Suggested Movement Practices Exemption Language:
Nothing in this Article shall be
construed to prevent or restrict the practice of any person in this
state who uses touch, words and directed movement to deepen
awareness of existing patterns of movement in the body as well as to
suggest new possibilities of movement while engaged within the scope
of practice of a profession with established standards and ethics,
provided that their services are not designated or implied to be
massage or massage therapy. Such practices include, but are not
limited to the Feldenkrais Method of somatic education,
the Rolf Institute’s Rolf Movement Integration, the
Trager Approach to movement education, and Body-Mind
Centering. Practitioners must be recognized by or meet
the established standards of either a professional organization or credentialing
agency that represents or certifies the respective practice based on
a minimal level of training, demonstration of competency, and
adherence to ethical standards.
Nothing in this Article shall be
construed to prevent or restrict the practice of any person in this
state who uses touch to affect the energy systems, acupoints or Qi
meridians (channels of energy) of the human body while engaged
within the scope of practice of a profession with established standards and ethics, provided that their services are not
designated or implied to be massage or massage therapy. Such
practices include, but are not limited to Polarity, Polarity
Therapy, Polarity Bodywork Therapy, Asian Bodywork Therapy,
Acupressure, Jin Shin Do, Qi Gong, Reiki and Shiatsu.
Practitioners must be recognized by or meet the established standards of either a
professional organization or credentialing agency that represents or
certifies the respective practice based on a minimal level of
training, demonstration of competency, and adherence to ethical
standards.
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