Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 Keep in mind when looking at state laws which may change once per year duing legislative session there is also a quasi-legislative function within the executive branch of state government promulgating an ongoing Administrative Code. These codes can change as frequently as monthly or as often as the board agencies hold meetings. Administrative code clarifies scope of practice. As Brian suggests.....go to the state's website and look up BOTh the laws & rules. Richard In a message dated 7/8/2004 10:26:40 PM Eastern Daylight Time, brian_s_beard writes: FYI, acupuncture.com is unreliable for information concerning state laws. It is just not up to date at all and gives summaries of laws recast into someone else's words instead of an actual transcription of the laws. http://www.faomra.org/public_forum.htm is better, but still not up to date - but they atleast give you the date of last change on the web page. Unless someone knows of a central repository for state laws that is maintained periodically, the only way to be sure of a law is to go to each state's site independently and download their laws. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 " Unless someone knows of a central repository for state laws that is maintained periodically, the only way to be sure of a law is to go to each state's site independently and download their laws. " For several years, Barbara Mitchell, formally of the AAOM, NCCA, and Acupuncture Alliance, has been producing a book on all the state laws. She did this every two years by contacting every state board and having them complete several questions that do not usually get spelled out in their formal laws such as the legal status of scope issues herbs, homeopathy,and other issues. She retired recently and put off her latest edition but I believe it is nearly ready for publication. You can check with the AOM Alliance and ask when this will be ready for sale. By the way - virtually all of the web sites and so forth that publish information on state laws took this directly from Barbara's books - most without giving credit or seeking permission. Matt Bauer - briansbeard Chinese Medicine Thursday, July 08, 2004 7:03 PM Re: state by state acu laws FYI, acupuncture.com is unreliable for information concerning state laws. It is just not up to date at all and gives summaries of laws recast into someone else's words instead of an actual transcription of the laws. http://www.faomra.org/public_forum.htm is better, but still not up to date - but they atleast give you the date of last change on the web page. Unless someone knows of a central repository for state laws that is maintained periodically, the only way to be sure of a law is to go to each state's site independently and download their laws. Chinese Medicine , " Sacredqi888 " <sacredqi888@n...> wrote: > > > I found this link which might interest you. > > http://www.acupuncture.com/StateLaws/laws-all.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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