New Law Gives Maine Acupuncturists Increased Scope of Practice
Acupuncture Today - July, 2004, Volume 05, Issue 07
Page printed from:
http://www.acupuncturetoday.com/archives2004/jul/07mainebill.html
New Law Gives Maine Acupuncturists Increased Scope of
Practice
Ever since a licensing law was passed in 1987,
acupuncturists in Maine have clamored for the right to
practice other modalities of Oriental medicine aside from
needle insertion. Acupuncturists earned that right on April
26, 2004, when Gov. John Baldacci signed into law
Legislative Document 263, a new bill that greatly increases
the scope of practice for acupuncturists. Included in the
bill is the ability for licensed acupuncturists to prescribe
Chinese herbal formulas, along with various other procedures
performed by health care providers in neighboring states.
Before the passage of LD 263, there was no scope of practice
for acupuncturists in Maine. Instead, the law provided
merely a definition of acupuncture, which allowed only for
the insertion of needles through the skin, with or without
electric current or heat to the needles, a person's skin, or
both. Acupuncturists could not prescribe or dispense herbs,
nor could they offer advice on diet and nutrition.
The new scope of practice incorporated into LD 263 includes
not just acupuncture, but a variety of "allied techniques
and modalities" used to treat illness and injury. These
techniques include: Oriental diagnostic procedures;
electrical and magnetic stimulation; moxibustion and other
forms of heat therapy; sound, light and vibrational therapy;
cupping techniques and gua sha; recommendation and
dispensing of Chinese patent or premade herbal remedies;
lifestyle and dietary counseling; sotai; shiatsu; qi gong;
zero balancing; tui na; and acupressure.
LD 263 also includes provisions for acupuncturists who want
to dispense custom-made Chinese herbal formulas. Although
many schools of acupuncture in the U.S. teach herbal studies
in depth, it is not mandatory for graduation in many
schools. The state's acupuncture board will set up a
certification process and adopt rules for licensed
acupuncturists who wish to dispense such formulas; however,
temporary exemptions are allowed for acupuncturists who can
prove they were engaged in the practice of formulation of
Chinese herbal remedies, or who are already qualified to
formulate custom-made herbal remedies in another state.
Those acupuncturists who wish to use formulas dispensed as
patent medications will be allowed to do so without further
certification.
The Long, Strange Trip of Legislative Document 263
LD 263's 15-month odyssey through the Maine legislature
began in January 2003, when it was introduced by Sen. Lynn
Bromley. Almost immediately, it was referred to the Senate
Committee on Business, Research and Economic Development,
which, after a series of public hearings, recommended a
"sunrise review" on the bill. The sunrise review process is
required when there is an expansion of original legislation,
and is designed to determine a bill's impact on public
safety.
In mid-December 2003, the state's Department of Professional
and Financial Regulation issued a report stating that "very
few complaints" had ever been received by the state's Board
of Complementary Health Care Providers against licensed
acupuncturists, and that "the fact that none of the
complaints received has related directly to the providing of
services using Oriental techniques and modalities indicates
that the public is at low risk" of being harmed by
acupuncturists. Nevertheless, the department recommended
against passage of the proposed legislation because no
public safety issues had been identified, given the
educational preparation of licensed acupuncturists. In
effect, the department's argument was that since there were
no safety issues with the practice of acupuncture, the
current law was sufficient, and any further legislation
would therefore be unnecessary.
In addition, both the Maine Chiropractic Association (MCA)
and the Maine Medical Association (MMA) opposed the bill.
While the MMA refused to negotiate and maintained the bill
gave legitimacy to an "unproven" form of health care,1 the
MCA agreed to sit down with representatives of the
acupuncture profession and develop wording to the bill that
met with the approval of both groups. By February 2004, the
MCA had become supportive of the acupuncturists and the
bill.
The Maine Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (MAAOM),
although happy about its work with the MCA and the
department's endorsement regarding public safety,
nevertheless disagreed with the department's conclusion. As
a result, the MAAOM reached out to the American Acupuncture
Council (AAC), a national malpractice insurer. In this case,
the AAC elected to strongly support MAAOM's legislation.
AAC Vice President and General Counsel Michael Schroeder
stated, "After discussions with the MAAOM, we became
convinced that this was an appropriate area for us to weigh
in on. It was not just a scope of practice issue, it was
also a malpractice issue. Malpractice policies cannot cover
an acupuncturist for something that is not legal for him or
her to do. By convincing the legislature to expand the legal
scope of practice for acupuncturists in Maine, we were also
expanding coverage that we could provide to our insureds.
The MAAOM did a great job of carrying the ball on this
legislation."
The AAC also provided the following written testimony:
Malpractice insurance policies for acupuncturists written in
the United States only cover acupuncturists for those
treatments and/or diagnostic modalities that are legally and
specifically included within their state's legal scope of
practice. Specifically in Maine, an acupuncturist is only
covered for "the insertion of fine metal needles through the
skin at specific points on or near the surface of the body
with or without the palpation of specific points on the body
and with or without the application of electric current or
heat to the needles or skin, or both." This is the
definition of legal scope of acupuncture in Maine found in
32 MRSA Section 12501(1). The proposed legislation in L.D.
263 would expand the definition of the legal scope of
acupuncture in Maine to include the usual scope of practice
for acupuncturists in most states, including such things as
moxibustion, heat therapy, sound, light, vibrational
therapy, cupping techniques, diet, and herbology. All of
these things are not currently covered by malpractice
insurance for acupuncturists in Maine but will be covered if
this legislation passes.
It appears to us that the primary bases for the
recommendation against this legislation is that there will
be no increase in public protection if this legislation
passes. We respectfully disagree with this conclusion. The
fact that acupuncturists will have malpractice protection
for these treatment modalities if they are explicitly
included within their scope of practice would appear to
dramatically increase public protection. In addition, very
little in the way of valid conclusions can be deduced from
the fact that there is no evidence that the failure to
license these modalities has not yet resulted in any public
harm. Since these modalities are not currently legal in
Maine, there are very few, if any practitioners who are
willing to risk criminal prosecutory license discipline
and/or uncovered malpractice claims for practicing these
unauthorized treatment modalities.
Since the report also concludes that "the public safety is
not unreasonably jeopardized by the use of these additional
modalities" and because public safety will, in fact, be
increased by explicitly authorizing these modalities and
obtaining malpractice insurance for these modalities, we
believe that there is no reason that this legislation should
not be adopted.
The MAAOM also wanted to avoid problems states such as Ohio
and Texas had encountered recently with undefined scopes of
practice. As a result, it decided to push ahead and heavily
lobbied the committee assigned to LD 263 to consider the
bill as an economic development issue.
In February, the committee revisited the legislation and
approved the bill with a 12-1 vote. It was then sent to the
legislature for a full vote. The MAAOM mounted a massive
lobbying effort at this point. With only about 90
acupuncturists in the state (most located in the southern
part of the state or on the coast), educating and convincing
the entire legislature of the bill's merits was a daunting
task. The bill eventually passed through the Senate, where
the acupuncturists thought they would be most vulnerable.
Later that day (April 7), it was soundly rejected by the
House 81 to 44 when legislators, influenced by the MMA,
promoted the bill as dangerous.
In a conference call that night, Sen. Bromley urged the
MAAOM leadership not to give up. She thought that many of
the "nay" votes were a result of the legislators not
understanding the bill, and promised to have the Senate send
the bill back to the House for a re-vote, giving Maine's
acupuncturists about five days to get 40 additional votes.
"Only late in the process, we began to realize the freedom
of speaking up for the right to be a fully recognized as a
force to be dealt with and owning our own power in the arena
of healing," said MAAOM Legislative Chair Jolinda Rockett,
MAc, LAc. "Once the MMA broke the veil and pointed a finger
at the issue of Chinese herbs, we were given the boldness to
break our polite silence. We had to speak up to address the
herb issue without apology. We educated the legislators and
won their confidence (by) citing our extensive education and
records of safety. Legislators, we discovered, can be
educated, influenced by reason, or otherwise swayed when
approached personally with valid arguments. Our efforts were
further assisted by unexpected passionate testimony on the
floor by representatives who had personal stories about
acupuncture experiences."
A grassroots lobbying effort that involved 45
acupuncturists, along with every patient and friendly
medical supporter they could find, netted unexpectedly
positive results. On April 15, the House voted to pass LD
263 by a vote of 83 to 56. The following day, it was enacted
by a voice vote in the Senate and again challenged on
enactment in the House, where it squeaked through again
(with many MAAOM supporters absent) in a close 68-62 vote,
before finally being sent to Gov. Baldacci's desk for his
signature.
The MMA continued strong lobbying efforts seeking a veto
from the governor even after the bill passed both the House
and Senate. After the bill was signed into law, the MMA
declared Gov. Baldacci had imposed a "double standard" by
heavily emphasizing patient safety and evidence-based
medicine for traditional medicine but not doing the same for
practitioners of alternative medicine.2 Officials with the
Baldacci administration rejected the MMA's assertions,
noting that several states have already passed similar
laws.3
References
1. Croasdale M. Empowered by insurers and states,
nonphysicians push practice limits. American Medical News
Feb. 9, 2004.
2. Governor signs acupuncture bill; legislature returns
tomorrow. Maine Medical Association press release, April 26,
2004.
3. Gov. signs acupuncture bill. Portland Press Herald April
28, 2004.
Editor's note: Acupuncture Today would like to thank the
Maine Association of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine and
the American Acupuncture Council for their assistance in the
writing of this article. If you would like to comment on
this article, please contact Acupuncture Today by fax
(714-899-4273) or e-mail at Editorial@AcupunctureToday.com.
You are also encouraged to discuss this article online at
www.AcupunctureToday.com/forums.
Acupuncture Today - July, 2004, Volume 05, Issue 07
Page printed from:
http://www.acupuncturetoday.com/archives2004/jul/07mainebill.html
