Guest guest Posted August 25, 2009 Report Share Posted August 25, 2009 Hi Group, Does anyone have experience or info regarding doctoral programs in Canada. I posted a while back on this, but am still struggling with the lack of info I have found. Is the DTCM equivalent to DAOM? Is it just a different title because its Canada? My understanding is that they are the same. However, program length and number of credits between program is variable. I was told by the Canadian school, that when I graduate from their doctoral program, and I take the Canadian test, I would then be equivalent to the US DAOM. Any thoughts? I don't want to venture into this and have problems after graduation. Thank you for any info you can share. David M Vitello, LAc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2009 Report Share Posted August 25, 2009 Hello David: The College is in the process of being set up at this moment by the Transitional Council. The aim is to have a program that will allow practitioners to carry their skills from one province to the next. It will include categories of Doctor, acupuncturist, and needle therapist, but at the present time the rules for entry are not set and will not be until 2010. Please go to: www.info@... I hope this helps you. William A. Brown DCM., Dr.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2009 Report Share Posted August 25, 2009 Hi Willaim, Thank you for your help with this. I have a few questions though: 1. Are you writing about PRC in Victoria specifically, in regrads to being in the process with the Transitional Council? 2. By " carry their skills from one province to the next " , do you mean between the US and Canada or just within Canadian provinces? Thanks again. Sincerely, David Vitello Chinese Medicine , aqupoint wrote: > > Hello David: The College is in the process of being set up at this moment by the Transitional Council. The aim is to have a program that will allow practitioners to carry their skills from one province to the next. It will include categories of Doctor, acupuncturist, and needle therapist, but at the present time the rules for entry are not set and will not be until 2010. Please go to: www.info@... > I hope this helps you. > William A. Brown DCM., Dr.Ac. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2009 Report Share Posted August 26, 2009 Hi WIlliam, I am not sure where David is, he should let us know which province. Hugo ________________________________ Hugo Ramiro http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com http://www.chinesemedicaltherapies.org ________________________________ " aqupoint " <aqupoint Chinese Medicine Tuesday, 25 August, 2009 15:03:15 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM Hello David: The College is in the process of being set up at this moment by the Transitional Council. The aim is to have a program that will allow practitioners to carry their skills from one province to the next. It will include categories of Doctor, acupuncturist, and needle therapist, but at the present time the rules for entry are not set and will not be until 2010. Please go to: www.info@ctcmpao. on.ca I hope this helps you. William A. Brown DCM., Dr.Ac. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2009 Report Share Posted August 26, 2009 Hi David, William is writing about Ontario. British Columbia has its college in place already. The link for their college is at http://www.ctcma.bc.ca/index.asp Hugo ________________________________ Hugo Ramiro http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com http://www.middlemedicine.org ________________________________ dmvitello01 <dmvitello Chinese Medicine Tuesday, 25 August, 2009 17:29:34 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM Hi Willaim, Thank you for your help with this. I have a few questions though: 1. Are you writing about PRC in Victoria specifically, in regrads to being in the process with the Transitional Council? 2. By " carry their skills from one province to the next " , do you mean between the US and Canada or just within Canadian provinces? Thanks again. Sincerely, David Vitello Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine , aqupoint wrote: > > Hello David: The College is in the process of being set up at this moment by the Transitional Council. The aim is to have a program that will allow practitioners to carry their skills from one province to the next. It will include categories of Doctor, acupuncturist, and needle therapist, but at the present time the rules for entry are not set and will not be until 2010. Please go to: www.info@... > I hope this helps you. > William A. Brown DCM., Dr.Ac. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2009 Report Share Posted August 26, 2009 William and Hugo, Thanks for helping me out with this. I am practicing in Seattle, WA. Planning on going to Pacific Rim College in BC. Upon graduating I will move back to Seattle. I have no plans to ever really practice in Canada. So my question is about the DTCM degree in regards to acceptance in the US. Do you guys both agree it is equivalent to a DAOM? Do you know any situations that are like what I have described..US practitioners getting their doctorates in Canada and then returning to prax in the US with a Doctor title? Is this happening at all in the Ontario school? Thanks again guys:) David Vitello Chinese Medicine , Hugo Ramiro <subincor wrote: > > Hi David, William is writing about Ontario. British Columbia has its college in place already. The link for their college is at > > http://www.ctcma.bc.ca/index.asp > > Hugo > > ________________________________ > Hugo Ramiro > http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com > http://www.middlemedicine.org > > > > > > ________________________________ > dmvitello01 <dmvitello > Chinese Medicine > Tuesday, 25 August, 2009 17:29:34 > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > Hi Willaim, > > Thank you for your help with this. I have a few questions though: > > 1. Are you writing about PRC in Victoria specifically, in regrads to being in the process with the Transitional Council? > > 2. By " carry their skills from one province to the next " , do you mean between the US and Canada or just within Canadian provinces? > > Thanks again. > > Sincerely, > David Vitello > > Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine , aqupoint@ wrote: > > > > Hello David: The College is in the process of being set up at this moment by the Transitional Council. The aim is to have a program that will allow practitioners to carry their skills from one province to the next. It will include categories of Doctor, acupuncturist, and needle therapist, but at the present time the rules for entry are not set and will not be until 2010. Please go to: www.info@ > > I hope this helps you. > > William A. Brown DCM., Dr.Ac. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2009 Report Share Posted August 26, 2009 You want to be careful, many states, including Oregon, do not allow you to use degrees that are not from fully accredited colleges, and I have my doubts about Pacific Rim. Why would you not choose Bastyr or the distance program at OCOM instead? Regards, Angela Pfaffenberger, Ph.D. angelapfa www.InnerhealthSalem.com Phone: 503 364 3022 - dmvitello01 Chinese Medicine Wednesday, August 26, 2009 2:24 PM Re: DAOM vs. DTCM William and Hugo, Thanks for helping me out with this. I am practicing in Seattle, WA. Planning on going to Pacific Rim College in BC. Upon graduating I will move back to Seattle. I have no plans to ever really practice in Canada. So my question is about the DTCM degree in regards to acceptance in the US. Do you guys both agree it is equivalent to a DAOM? Do you know any situations that are like what I have described..US practitioners getting their doctorates in Canada and then returning to prax in the US with a Doctor title? Is this happening at all in the Ontario school? Thanks again guys:) David Vitello Chinese Medicine , Hugo Ramiro <subincor wrote: > > Hi David, William is writing about Ontario. British Columbia has its college in place already. The link for their college is at > > http://www.ctcma.bc.ca/index.asp > > Hugo > > ________________________________ > Hugo Ramiro > http://middlemedicine.wordpress.com > http://www.middlemedicine.org > > > > > > ________________________________ > dmvitello01 <dmvitello > Chinese Medicine > Tuesday, 25 August, 2009 17:29:34 > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > Hi Willaim, > > Thank you for your help with this. I have a few questions though: > > 1. Are you writing about PRC in Victoria specifically, in regrads to being in the process with the Transitional Council? > > 2. By " carry their skills from one province to the next " , do you mean between the US and Canada or just within Canadian provinces? > > Thanks again. > > Sincerely, > David Vitello > > Traditional_ Chinese_Medicine , aqupoint@ wrote: > > > > Hello David: The College is in the process of being set up at this moment by the Transitional Council. The aim is to have a program that will allow practitioners to carry their skills from one province to the next. It will include categories of Doctor, acupuncturist, and needle therapist, but at the present time the rules for entry are not set and will not be until 2010. Please go to: www.info@ > > I hope this helps you. > > William A. Brown DCM., Dr.Ac. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 Not sure what is being defined as efficacious? I know practitioners who acomplished apprenticeships and NO... DAOM or Master degrees could ever compare. So what might we be comparing? Just the average Masters degree to the DAOM degree? If so that makes sense that DAOM is more and higher education. But efficacy in practice.....that is a whole other ball of wax. Richard In a message dated 8/27/2009 3:57:50 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, don83407 writes: And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 David Blowhards is correct. But also money grubbing greedy *% & ***. Agreed for entry level doctor degree but it MUST be regionally accredited otherwise useless other than for state licensing laws. And as I proved here in Florida after 14 years of battle..... using even the doctor title is legal as adjudicated by a FEDERAL COURT in 1995 as long as it is truthful " commercial speech " and no fraud is intended but we need not get into that discussion....its old hat already. So if one is only looking for a useless title - no problem. More importantly even accredited degrees do not make the practitioner. Richard In a message dated 8/27/2009 4:36:56 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, acuman1 writes: To be truthful, my feeling is that all these letters are useless and education beyond entry level is for private inquiry and enlightenment. However, I am not a big time academia fan, as I see present day universities as a bunch of blowhards who get degrees to get degrees instead of having a genuine interest in students and sharing intelligence. I know of a Oriental Medicine program that was supposed to start up here in PA, and the president, vice president in charge of allied health, and the provost were all in favor, along with a state grant for start up, with plenty of space available since there was a new 36 million allied health facility. The faculty would not let it happen because if the president liked it, they didn't since they didnt' like the president because he actually wanted to run the university as a forward looking business instead of just go to state businesses and pull in donation money. Petty *'s. We do, however, need a first professional doctorate program for our profession as entry level, and I acknowledge that we need to have DAOM's and their equivalent to be able to teach at that level in today's educational environment. David Molony On Aug 27, 2009, at 3:30:45 PM, singlewhip2001 <_singlewhip2001@singlewhi_ (singlewhip2001) > wrote: singlewhip2001 <_singlewhip2001@singlewhi_ (singlewhip2001) > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM August 27, 2009 3:30:45 PM EDT _Traditional_Traditional_<WBRTraditional_Tra_ (Chinese Medicine ) My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. _Traditional_Traditional_<WBRTraditional_Tra_ (Chinese Medicine ) , aqupoint wrote: > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 No you are correcty.....I wasn't at PCOM. But just to clarify....whatever PCOM did in their comparison is just their opinion which they are entitled to just as you say..l.so is everyone else. Over & out, Richard In a message dated 8/27/2009 6:34:57 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, don83407 writes: Friend, I'm just stating what what done at PCOM. I'm not here to parse words. You have your opions as do everyone else. You weren't at PCOM so you do not know what was compared. I'll leave it at that. Out, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 There is no accredited Phd in AOM to date. Therefore, that assertion is not correct. There is only one accredited Doctorate in AOM in the United States, and that is the DAOM. Also, one does not need the DAOM to practice in the U.S. You only need a Master's level degree. Therefore, the DAOM doesn't really matter except to the one that has it. It means they cared enough to go the extra mile. And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. Hope this helps, Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. Chinese Medicine singlewhip2001 Thu, 27 Aug 2009 19:30:45 +0000 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. Chinese Medicine , aqupoint wrote: > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 To be truthful, my feeling is that all these letters are useless and education beyond entry level is for private inquiry and enlightenment. However, I am not a big time academia fan, as I see present day universities as a bunch of blowhards who get degrees to get degrees instead of having a genuine interest in students and sharing intelligence. I know of a Oriental Medicine program that was supposed to start up here in PA, and the president, vice president in charge of allied health, and the provost were all in favor, along with a state grant for start up, with plenty of space available since there was a new 36 million allied health facility. The faculty would not let it happen because if the president liked it, they didn't since they didnt' like the president because he actually wanted to run the university as a forward looking business instead of just go to state businesses and pull in donation money. Petty *'s. We do, however, need a first professional doctorate program for our profession as entry level, and I acknowledge that we need to have DAOM's and their equivalent to be able to teach at that level in today's educational environment. David Molony On Aug 27, 2009, at 3:30:45 PM, singlewhip2001 <singlewhip2001 wrote: singlewhip2001 <singlewhip2001 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM August 27, 2009 3:30:45 PM EDT Chinese Medicine My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. --- In Chinese Medicine , aqupoint wrote: > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 The DAOM has been accredited by the Acupuncture accrediting institution two years ago, and it has also been nationally and regionally accredited. Bastyr was the first, followed by OCOM and then PCOM. So yes, the DAOM is fully accredited by all acrediting agencies, OM and otherwise. Don Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. Chinese Medicine singlewhip2001 Thu, 27 Aug 2009 21:26:57 +0000 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM An accredited institution does not mean AOM accreditation. Some accredited institutions are approved by the department of secondary education, like UCLA, Stanford, etc, that's why the degree is universally accepted. Correct me if I am wrong, I don't believe the DAOM is accredited, its a work in process. Let me know on this and the source you are using for it. thanks Chinese Medicine , Donald Snow <don83407 wrote: > > > There is no accredited Phd in AOM to date. Therefore, that assertion is not correct. There is only one accredited Doctorate in AOM in the United States, and that is the DAOM. > > > > Also, one does not need the DAOM to practice in the U.S. You only need a Master's level degree. Therefore, the DAOM doesn't really matter except to the one that has it. It means they cared enough to go the extra mile. And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. > > > > Hope this helps, > > > > Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > Chinese Medicine > singlewhip2001 > Thu, 27 Aug 2009 19:30:45 +0000 > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > > > > My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. > > Chinese Medicine , aqupoint@ wrote: > > > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 Would you clarify the following statement i got from the ACAOM website: " ACAOM is conducting reviews of post-graduate doctoral programs as a pilot process. Since ACAOM's doctoral program reviews are not currently within ACAOM scope of recognition with the U.S. Secretary of Education, institutions may not use ACAOM's candidacy status to establish eligibility for Title IV financial aid for students in these programs. " thanks Chinese Medicine , Donald Snow <don83407 wrote: > > > The DAOM has been accredited by the Acupuncture accrediting institution two years ago, and it has also been nationally and regionally accredited. Bastyr was the first, followed by OCOM and then PCOM. > > > > So yes, the DAOM is fully accredited by all acrediting agencies, OM and otherwise. > > > > Don Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > Chinese Medicine > singlewhip2001 > Thu, 27 Aug 2009 21:26:57 +0000 > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > > > > An accredited institution does not mean AOM accreditation. Some accredited institutions are approved by the department of secondary education, like UCLA, Stanford, etc, that's why the degree is universally accepted. > > Correct me if I am wrong, I don't believe the DAOM is accredited, its a work in process. Let me know on this and the source you are using for it. > > thanks > > Chinese Medicine , Donald Snow <don83407@> wrote: > > > > > > There is no accredited Phd in AOM to date. Therefore, that assertion is not correct. There is only one accredited Doctorate in AOM in the United States, and that is the DAOM. > > > > > > > > Also, one does not need the DAOM to practice in the U.S. You only need a Master's level degree. Therefore, the DAOM doesn't really matter except to the one that has it. It means they cared enough to go the extra mile. And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. > > > > > > > > Hope this helps, > > > > > > > > Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > > > > > Chinese Medicine > > singlewhip2001@ > > Thu, 27 Aug 2009 19:30:45 +0000 > > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > > > > > > > > > > My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. > > > > Chinese Medicine , aqupoint@ wrote: > > > > > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 Friend, I'm just stating what what done at PCOM. I'm not here to parse words. You have your opions as do everyone else. You weren't at PCOM so you do not know what was compared. I'll leave it at that. Out, Don J. SNow Chinese Medicine acudoc11 Thu, 27 Aug 2009 17:22:46 -0400 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM Not sure what is being defined as efficacious? I know practitioners who acomplished apprenticeships and NO... DAOM or Master degrees could ever compare. So what might we be comparing? Just the average Masters degree to the DAOM degree? If so that makes sense that DAOM is more and higher education. But efficacy in practice.....that is a whole other ball of wax. Richard In a message dated 8/27/2009 3:57:50 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, don83407 writes: And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 27, 2009 Report Share Posted August 27, 2009 right, there is the accreditation by the department of secondary education, which follows from the Regional Councils of Colleges and Universities. Some OM schools have such accreditation for their masters programs, including OCOM and Bastyr, but none of the doctoral programs have that level of accreditation yet. However, there is also the accreditation through the Council of Acupuncture Schools and Colleges, which is worth less, you really do not have a regular university degree, and they have just recently accredited some of the doctoral programs, including OCOM. People who have PhDs usually have them in other field, mine is in psychology, and I make a point in all advertising to say what my doctorate is in. You could work towards a PhD in psychology and specialize in pain physiology and management, and end up with some useful skills. I find that being able to evaluate and design research projects was really the most useful skill; also a number of schools were interested in hiring me because I have a doctorate, but the income they offer just does not compare to private practice, not even close. Regards, Angela Pfaffenberger, Ph.D. angelapfa www.InnerhealthSalem.com Phone: 503 364 3022 - singlewhip2001 Chinese Medicine Thursday, August 27, 2009 2:26 PM Re: DAOM vs. DTCM An accredited institution does not mean AOM accreditation. Some accredited institutions are approved by the department of secondary education, like UCLA, Stanford, etc, that's why the degree is universally accepted. Correct me if I am wrong, I don't believe the DAOM is accredited, its a work in process. Let me know on this and the source you are using for it. thanks Chinese Medicine , Donald Snow <don83407 wrote: > > > There is no accredited Phd in AOM to date. Therefore, that assertion is not correct. There is only one accredited Doctorate in AOM in the United States, and that is the DAOM. > > > > Also, one does not need the DAOM to practice in the U.S. You only need a Master's level degree. Therefore, the DAOM doesn't really matter except to the one that has it. It means they cared enough to go the extra mile. And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. > > > > Hope this helps, > > > > Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > Chinese Medicine > singlewhip2001 > Thu, 27 Aug 2009 19:30:45 +0000 > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > > > > My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. > > Chinese Medicine , aqupoint@ wrote: > > > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2009 Report Share Posted August 28, 2009 I think we are using different terminology to describe two completely different points of view. It has been said that ACAOM has conditionally accredited some of its DAOM programs. This is true. They admit that they do not have the authority to fully accredit DAOM programs as their charter with the Dept of Education must expand to allow for this. So, on the one hand they appear to be making a statement that they are accrediting DAOMs but in actuality they are not really. As for the ACAOM issue with DAOM funding, ACAOM accreditation is used by the schools to provide students with access to title IV federal loans. Only Bastyr is offering their DAOM with financial aid, which must be due to their being a regionally accredited program (they are mainly a Naturopathic school). This is why the current DAOM programs offer no financial aid from the govt. Michael W. Bowser, DC, LAc www.minneapolisacupuncture.net This email message is intended only for the personal use of the above named recipient(s). If you are not the intended recipient, you may not review, copy or forward this email message. If you have received this communication in error, please notify the sender immediately via email or phone and delete the message accordingly. Chinese Medicine singlewhip2001 Thu, 27 Aug 2009 22:29:31 +0000 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM Would you clarify the following statement i got from the ACAOM website: " ACAOM is conducting reviews of post-graduate doctoral programs as a pilot process. Since ACAOM's doctoral program reviews are not currently within ACAOM scope of recognition with the U.S. Secretary of Education, institutions may not use ACAOM's candidacy status to establish eligibility for Title IV financial aid for students in these programs. " thanks Chinese Medicine , Donald Snow <don83407 wrote: > > > The DAOM has been accredited by the Acupuncture accrediting institution two years ago, and it has also been nationally and regionally accredited. Bastyr was the first, followed by OCOM and then PCOM. > > > > So yes, the DAOM is fully accredited by all acrediting agencies, OM and otherwise. > > > > Don Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > Chinese Medicine > singlewhip2001 > Thu, 27 Aug 2009 21:26:57 +0000 > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > > > > An accredited institution does not mean AOM accreditation. Some accredited institutions are approved by the department of secondary education, like UCLA, Stanford, etc, that's why the degree is universally accepted. > > Correct me if I am wrong, I don't believe the DAOM is accredited, its a work in process. Let me know on this and the source you are using for it. > > thanks > > Chinese Medicine , Donald Snow <don83407@> wrote: > > > > > > There is no accredited Phd in AOM to date. Therefore, that assertion is not correct. There is only one accredited Doctorate in AOM in the United States, and that is the DAOM. > > > > > > > > Also, one does not need the DAOM to practice in the U.S. You only need a Master's level degree. Therefore, the DAOM doesn't really matter except to the one that has it. It means they cared enough to go the extra mile. And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. > > > > > > > > Hope this helps, > > > > > > > > Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > > > > > Chinese Medicine > > singlewhip2001@ > > Thu, 27 Aug 2009 19:30:45 +0000 > > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > > > > > > > > > > My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. > > > > Chinese Medicine , aqupoint@ wrote: > > > > > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2009 Report Share Posted August 28, 2009 ACAOM website confirms that this is conditional accreditation otherwise a school would not have a problem getting federal financial aid for the DAOM. Michael W. Bowser, DC, LAc Chinese Medicine singlewhip2001 Thu, 27 Aug 2009 21:26:57 +0000 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM An accredited institution does not mean AOM accreditation. Some accredited institutions are approved by the department of secondary education, like UCLA, Stanford, etc, that's why the degree is universally accepted. Correct me if I am wrong, I don't believe the DAOM is accredited, its a work in process. Let me know on this and the source you are using for it. thanks Chinese Medicine , Donald Snow <don83407 wrote: > > > There is no accredited Phd in AOM to date. Therefore, that assertion is not correct. There is only one accredited Doctorate in AOM in the United States, and that is the DAOM. > > > > Also, one does not need the DAOM to practice in the U.S. You only need a Master's level degree. Therefore, the DAOM doesn't really matter except to the one that has it. It means they cared enough to go the extra mile. And yes, the efficacy of the DAOM is higher than that of the Master's level. They have been compared at PCOM, which is where I earned my DAOM. > > > > Hope this helps, > > > > Don J. Snow, DAOM, MPH, L.Ac. > > > > Chinese Medicine > singlewhip2001 > Thu, 27 Aug 2009 19:30:45 +0000 > Re: DAOM vs. DTCM > > > > > > My understanding is the DAOM has no value to Acupuncture licensing agencies. The Ph.D. from an accredited institution is the only universally accepted degree. > > Chinese Medicine , aqupoint@ wrote: > > > > Hello David: I will not matter what the title is ,if it is not accepted. I assume the degrees are the same, but I don,t know and surely someone will say they are not. I was in school for 4 years to learn what I know, but until there is one World standard, there will be arguing about who knows more etc. You should check with the area in which you want to work as to what you need too have. William. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2009 Report Share Posted August 28, 2009 Dear People - I thought I would throw in my 2 cents on this discussion since I developed Emperor's and SAMRA's doctoral program and have led the Academy of Oriental Medicine at Austin (AOMA) through its candidacy phase and full membership site visit with the regional accreditor: the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). There are two primary recognized forms of accreditation, programmatic and institutional. The regionals accredit institutions such as UCLA and Harvard. Within those institutions, the professions of psychology and medicine have their programmatic accreditation from within the discipline. Our profession gains access to financial aid (Title IV funding) through ACAOM accreditation, and they are recognized by the Department of Education as a programmatic accreditor. To the best of my knowledge, there are now 6 AOM schools that are regionally accredited and 3 in candidacy. No state accredits. They can recognize or approve a program. The PhD in California has neither regional or programmatic accreditation. They have approval to operate in California. The use of that degree for getting a union card to teach in the university system won't work. It is an excellent program, however. The DAOMs may operate within regionally accredited institutions; there is only one at this time, and that is at Bastyr, their is another school with a DAOM that is in candidacy status. But, no DAOM program is recognized by the DOE. ACAOM now has success in approving DAOM programs to operate. Some are now in their 5th cohorts, having graduated 4 classes. ACAOM now has a sufficient track record to seek recognition from the DOE for accrediting the DAOM programs. Further, ACAOM has maximum recognition from the DOE for accrediting master degree programs and at the last review, had their scope expanded to include master degree candidate schools (this in effect allowed candidate schools to gain Title IV funding). The point is that ACAOM is in good standing and should be able to effectively move their recognition process through with the DOE without glitches. Their are, however, the equivelent of regionally accredited PhD programs running right now in China; some are conducted in English. One such program that I am familiar with is at Chengdu TCM University. Just as an aside, their is an elephant in the room, and that is branding. The state presidents group will hold a town hall meeting at the AAAOM conference in Albuqueque, NM. It is on Thursday, April 8, 2010. We are in a crisis about how we represent who we are and what we do. Just look at the differences in title by license and degree around the country in this profession. The group will be looking at how we brand ourselvesw as a community. Leaders in two states are now dealing with legal environements that prohibit the term Oriental as a descriptor in any state docuements (California and Washington). Show up there and have your voice heard. This process won;t end at the townhall, rather, it will be a continuation. Warmly, Will William R. Morris, PhD, DAOM, LAc President, AOMA 2700 Anderson Lane Suite 204 Austin, TX 78757 Phone: 512-454-1188 Fax: 512-454-7001 http://aoma.edu/ AOMA: Transforming Lives and Communities Through Graduate Education in Oriental Medicine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2009 Report Share Posted August 28, 2009 Will, Any way to get this type of meeting broadcast online, either as a gotomeeting or later put on youtube.com? For many of us, we cannot simply drop everything and make a trip. Please pass this along so that more of us can become involved. Thanks. Michael W. Bowser, DC, LAc Chinese Medicine wmorris33 Fri, 28 Aug 2009 13:10:30 +0000 Re: DAOM vs. DTCM Dear People - I thought I would throw in my 2 cents on this discussion since I developed Emperor's and SAMRA's doctoral program and have led the Academy of Oriental Medicine at Austin (AOMA) through its candidacy phase and full membership site visit with the regional accreditor: the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). There are two primary recognized forms of accreditation, programmatic and institutional. The regionals accredit institutions such as UCLA and Harvard. Within those institutions, the professions of psychology and medicine have their programmatic accreditation from within the discipline. Our profession gains access to financial aid (Title IV funding) through ACAOM accreditation, and they are recognized by the Department of Education as a programmatic accreditor. To the best of my knowledge, there are now 6 AOM schools that are regionally accredited and 3 in candidacy. No state accredits. They can recognize or approve a program. The PhD in California has neither regional or programmatic accreditation. They have approval to operate in California. The use of that degree for getting a union card to teach in the university system won't work. It is an excellent program, however. The DAOMs may operate within regionally accredited institutions; there is only one at this time, and that is at Bastyr, their is another school with a DAOM that is in candidacy status. But, no DAOM program is recognized by the DOE. ACAOM now has success in approving DAOM programs to operate. Some are now in their 5th cohorts, having graduated 4 classes. ACAOM now has a sufficient track record to seek recognition from the DOE for accrediting the DAOM programs. Further, ACAOM has maximum recognition from the DOE for accrediting master degree programs and at the last review, had their scope expanded to include master degree candidate schools (this in effect allowed candidate schools to gain Title IV funding). The point is that ACAOM is in good standing and should be able to effectively move their recognition process through with the DOE without glitches. Their are, however, the equivelent of regionally accredited PhD programs running right now in China; some are conducted in English. One such program that I am familiar with is at Chengdu TCM University. Just as an aside, their is an elephant in the room, and that is branding. The state presidents group will hold a town hall meeting at the AAAOM conference in Albuqueque, NM. It is on Thursday, April 8, 2010. We are in a crisis about how we represent who we are and what we do. Just look at the differences in title by license and degree around the country in this profession. The group will be looking at how we brand ourselvesw as a community. Leaders in two states are now dealing with legal environements that prohibit the term Oriental as a descriptor in any state docuements (California and Washington). Show up there and have your voice heard. This process won;t end at the townhall, rather, it will be a continuation. Warmly, Will William R. Morris, PhD, DAOM, LAc President, AOMA 2700 Anderson Lane Suite 204 Austin, TX 78757 Phone: 512-454-1188 Fax: 512-454-7001 http://aoma.edu/ AOMA: Transforming Lives and Communities Through Graduate Education in Oriental Medicine _______________ With Windows Live, you can organize, edit, and share your photos. http://www.windowslive.com/Desktop/PhotoGallery Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2009 Report Share Posted August 28, 2009 Thanks for the detailed update. Please correct me if I am wrong as I sum up your post. DAOM programs are not approved for accreditation with the Department of Education at this time, they may or may not receive it in the future. Since the DOE secretary is appointed by the President of the USA, and is a political position do you anticipate the AMA and medical political groups lobbying against the use of doctor? Just out of curiosity, if they are not accredited right now is it legal to use the doctor name? thanks Chinese Medicine , " wmorris33 " <wmorris33 wrote: > > Dear People - > > I thought I would throw in my 2 cents on this discussion since I developed Emperor's and SAMRA's doctoral program and have led the Academy of Oriental Medicine at Austin (AOMA) through its candidacy phase and full membership site visit with the regional accreditor: the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). > > There are two primary recognized forms of accreditation, programmatic and institutional. The regionals accredit institutions such as UCLA and Harvard. Within those institutions, the professions of psychology and medicine have their programmatic accreditation from within the discipline. Our profession gains access to financial aid (Title IV funding) through ACAOM accreditation, and they are recognized by the > Department of Education as a programmatic accreditor. To the best of my knowledge, there are now 6 AOM schools that are regionally accredited and 3 in candidacy. > > No state accredits. They can recognize or approve a program. The PhD in California has neither regional or programmatic accreditation. They have approval to operate in California. The use of that degree for getting a union card to teach in the university system won't work. It is an excellent program, however. The DAOMs may operate within regionally accredited institutions; there is only one at this time, and that is at Bastyr, their is another school with a DAOM that is in candidacy status. But, no DAOM program is recognized by the DOE. ACAOM now has success in approving DAOM programs to operate. Some are now in their 5th cohorts, having graduated 4 classes. > > ACAOM now has a sufficient track record to seek recognition from the DOE for accrediting the DAOM programs. Further, ACAOM has maximum recognition from the DOE for accrediting master degree programs and at the last review, had their scope expanded to include master degree candidate schools (this in effect allowed candidate schools to gain Title IV funding). The point is that ACAOM is in good standing and should be able to effectively move their recognition process through with the DOE without glitches. > > Their are, however, the equivelent of regionally accredited PhD programs running right now in China; some are conducted in English. One such program that I am familiar with is at Chengdu TCM University. > > Just as an aside, their is an elephant in the room, and that is branding. The state presidents group will hold a town hall meeting at the AAAOM conference in Albuqueque, NM. It is on Thursday, April 8, 2010. We are in a crisis about how we represent who we are and what we do. Just look at the differences in title by license and degree around the country in this profession. The group will be looking at how we brand ourselvesw as a community. Leaders in two states are now dealing with legal environements that prohibit the term Oriental as a descriptor in any state docuements (California and Washington). Show up there and have your voice heard. This process won;t end at the townhall, rather, it will be a continuation. > > > Warmly, > > > Will > > > William R. Morris, PhD, DAOM, LAc > President, AOMA > 2700 Anderson Lane Suite 204 > Austin, TX 78757 > Phone: 512-454-1188 > Fax: 512-454-7001 > http://aoma.edu/ > AOMA: Transforming Lives and Communities Through Graduate Education in Oriental Medicine > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2009 Report Share Posted August 28, 2009 Forgive my ignorance on this. Let me get this straight. If one goes to OCOM, can they use the title: " Dr. Jon Doe, DAOM " or is the use of " Dr " prohibited, or does this change with each states laws. Thank you, David Vitello Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 28, 2009 Report Share Posted August 28, 2009 Hi, it's a bit state dependent, Oregon passed a law that it's ok to use that title although the degree is not granted by a regional accredited university. I have a doctorate, and honestly, I think if you don't have one, it's easy to overestimate its significance. If you enter school and do all the work and pay the money just to get the degree, I really think you will be disappointed. Maybe you want to talk to some OCOM doctoral graduates; there is a great diversity in the degree of satisfaction people have with what they got. Regards, Angela Pfaffenberger, Ph.D. angelapfa www.InnerhealthSalem.com Phone: 503 364 3022 - dmvitello01 Chinese Medicine Friday, August 28, 2009 10:51 AM Re: DAOM vs. DTCM Forgive my ignorance on this. Let me get this straight. If one goes to OCOM, can they use the title: " Dr. Jon Doe, DAOM " or is the use of " Dr " prohibited, or does this change with each states laws. Thank you, David Vitello Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 29, 2009 Report Share Posted August 29, 2009 Hmmmm. Two states that do not believe in the 1st amendment, via PC loophole. David Molony On Aug 28, 2009, at 11:59:06 AM, singlewhip2001 <singlewhip2001 wrote: Leaders in two states are now dealing with legal environements that prohibit the term Oriental as a descriptor in any state docuements (California and Washington). Show up there and have your voice heard. This process won;t end at the townhall, rather, it will be a continuation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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