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Current Requirements for a Full Acupuncture
License in Massachusetts
- An applicant must be at least 18 years of age
- An applicant must be of good moral character
- An applicant must demonstrate sufficient knowledge of the English
language to understand and to be understood by patients, physicians
and Board of Registration of Medicine and Committee on Acupuncture
personnel. Effective 6-13-97 if the Massachusetts Licensure Examination
is or has been taken in a language other than English the applicant
must submit proof of a passing score on the TOEFL exam. The score
report must be sent directly from TOEFL to the Acupuncture Unit.
NOTE: If an applicant cannot document proficiency in English,
an applicant must provide the Acupuncture Unit with the name and
address of the interpreter he or she intends to employ once licensed.
- An applicant must pass the Massachusetts Licensure Exam as follows:
- National Commission for the Certification of Acupuncture
and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM) Comprehensive Written Exam
(CWE/ACUP) [the separately scored portion on Clean Needle
Technique was eliminated as of 9-10-98], and
- National Commission for the Certification of Acupuncture
and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM) Practical Exam of Point Location
Skills (PEPLS), and
- National Commission for the Certification of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (NCCAOM) Biomedicine Module (for graduates after January 1, 2007), and Council of Colleges of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine
(CCAOM) Clean Needle Course
- Any individual who takes the Massachusetts licensure examination
on or after 9-1-99 must take all components of such examination
in the English language.
- Educational Requirements
- The applicant must have completed two full years of undergraduate
study (60 semester hours or 90 quarter hours or the equivalent)
at an accredited college or university, (this accredited college
or university cannot be your acupuncture school) or foreign
institution which the Committee on Acupuncture deems the equivalent.
- The applicant must have completed, at an accredited college
or at a Committee on Acupuncture approved acupuncture school,
a three semester hour course in each of the following: general
biology, human physiology, and human anatomy. If an applicant
wishes to substitute another course as an equivalent for the
required general biology, human anatomy and human physiology
courses, the applicant must submit either a detailed course
description or a course syllabus of the course for the Committee
on Acupuncture to review. The Committee on Acupuncture will
not accept correspondence or self-study courses or equivalency
examinations for any of the required courses.
- The applicant must have completed a minimum of 1,350 hours
of clinical and didactic instruction in acupuncture related
courses, of which a minimum of 100 hours must be in the supervised
diagnosis and treatment of patients for whom the applicant
is solely responsible, in a school approved by the Committee
on Acupuncture. Note: Coursework in general biology, human
physiology, and human anatomy are excluded from the 1,350
hours of required acupuncture education.)
- An applicant who plans to employ herbal therapy in his or
her practice must have received a minimum of 30 hours of herbal
medicine training from a Committee on Acupuncture approved
school or Committee on Acupuncture approved program in order
to be licensed.
- An applicant who plans to employ herbal therapy (patent
or raw) in his or her practice must submit evidence of completion
of one of the following courses of education in herbology:
i. Completion of an Accreditation Commission for Acupuncture
and Oriental Medicine (ACAOM) accredited or candidate status
oriental medicine program. ii. Completion of an herbal medicine
program offered by an ACAOM accredited or candidate status
acupuncture school that meets the curriculum requirements
as described in the ACAOM Accreditation Handbook. iii. Completion
of an herbal medicine program which the Committee on Acupuncture
deems is substantially equivalent to or exceeds the ACAOM
curriculum requirements regarding herbal medicine as described
in the ACAOM Accreditation Handbook.
- An applicant who does not plan to employ herbal therapy
in his or her practice must have received a minimum of 30
hours of herbal medicine training from a Committee on Acupuncture
approved school or Committee on Acupuncture program in order
to be licensed.
- Foreign applicants must have a minimum of five (5) academic
years of study, of which three (3) academic years must consist
of acupuncture training in a Committee on Acupuncture approved
school. All transcripts must be in English and must state the
number of hours for each class, the number of hours for the entire
program, the number of months in attendance and the date the diploma
was awarded. Only foreign schools that are government approved
will be recognized by the Committee on Acupuncture. In addition,
the Acupuncture Unit will verify the authenticity of the documents
submitted by contacting the appropriate issuing institution.
- An applicant must have graduated from an acupuncture school
approved by the Committee on Acupuncture. Note: An acupuncture
school must be Committee on Acupuncture approved on the date the
applicant graduates from the school.
- Original transcript must be sent directly from an applicant's
undergraduate school to the Acupuncture Unit.
- Original transcript must be sent directly from an applicant's
acupuncture school to the Acupuncture Unit showing the date an
applicant's diploma was awarded.
- Original transcript must be sent directly from an applicant's
school(s) to the Acupuncture Unit listing a three (3) credit course
in human anatomy; a three (3) credit course in human physiology
and a three (3) credit course in general biology
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