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Naturopathic Bill in Legislature

March 22, 2009 Politics | Comments (3) Tyler @ 9:36 am

I am sorry, WordPress is not allowing me to format this in a mor readable manner.  I will work on it.  This is a letter from Jacob Schor ND and his position on HB 1175 in Colorado.   Naturopathic Bill in LegislatureJacob Schor ND FABNOFebruary 17, 2009Naturopathic medicine has a long history in Colorado. The University of Natural Healing Arts opened in Denver in 1923 and trained naturopathic doctors and chiropractors for forty years.   Students came to their training programs from all over Colorado and other nearby states and spent four years in-residence to earn their degrees, even nearly a century ago.  Although Colorado established licensing laws for chiropractors, no laws were ever passed to regulate naturopathic doctors. Naturopathic graduates of the program practiced under chiropractic licenses or moved to other states that recognized their training.  Actually that statement that no laws regulate naturopathic doctors in Colorado isn’t accurate.  The Medical Practice Acts clearly make it illegal to practice naturopathic medicine in Colorado.   As a result, we have spent the past 17 years attempting to amend the existing laws and so decriminalize the practice of naturopathic medicine in Colorado.   There is currently a bill in the legislature that if passed will make it legal for us to practice in Colorado.  HB 1175 (A Bill for an Act Concerning the Regulation of Naturopathic Doctors) is the sixth bill we have worked on since 1993.  We are grateful to Representative Kathleen Curry (D Gunnison) who is the Speaker Pro-tempore of the House, and Senator Suzanne Williams  (D Arapahoe/Denver) who are sponsoring this piece of legislation.   The bill was voted out of the House Health and Human Services Committee on February 12 and will next be heard in the House Appropriations Committee. Bills to regulate naturopathic doctors generate a surprisingly large amount of opposition.  The most strident of this opposition comes from lay practitioners of natural therapies; people who you think would favor the advancement of natural medicine.  This requires some explanation to understand.   Most of these people decide to oppose this bill (and similar attempts in past years) based on false information.   Now as in past years,  false claims are being circulated about what will happen if HB-1175 is passed into law. Let me first explain what the bill will really do and then correct the list of things it will not do.   If passed, HB-1175 will establish a Task Force run by the Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA) that will investigate how best to regulate the practices of naturopathic doctors in Colorado.  The Task Force will include naturopathic doctors and medical doctors who will call upon experts in specific fields for advice.  One contentious issue that the Task Force will have to investigate will be whether naturopathic doctors have adequate training in pharmaceuticals to be granted prescribing privileges.  Issues such as this are too complex to decide in the legislative arena. During the period of the Task Force’s investigation, naturopathic doctors will be required to register with DORA.  Those naturopathic doctors registered will have a specific scope of practice imposed upon them and be required to follow specific guidelines. This law will not affect any other practitioners except naturopathic doctors. Practitioners who trained through home study programs who are not legally recognized under current law as ‘doctors’ will not be required to register and will be exempt from the impositions imposed by the law.   This is a simple proposal and its provisions will apply only to naturopathic doctors registered under the act. Passage of this bill will not affect anyone else:  1. It does not change the legal status of any other practitioner in Colorado.  2. It does not change who can call themselves doctors.  Doctoral degrees are regulated by the U.S. Department of Education.  This will not change.  The bill imposes no regulation on other professions or occupations.  3. It does not put people out of work.  Claims that 16,000 people will lose their jobs or businesses are false.  4.  It does not change the status of any occupational school in Colorado.  Massage schools, herbal school, natural health programs and even cooking schools (as some claim) will not be shut down.5. It will not change current law regulating the sales of vitamins, herbs or homeopathic remedies.  The things sold over the counter will continue to be sold.  6.  It will not shut down health food stores. The bill will not affect anyone except those individuals required to register. The bill’s definition of the scope of practice allowed to naturopathic doctors lists possible therapies a naturopathic doctor may choose to use. The bill explains that naturopathic doctors may use natural forces such as sunlight, water and air as therapies.  It does not limit anyone else from also employing these same forces therapeutically.  The bill will not make it illegal to breath.   Nature provides us with many powerful and safe therapies that have the power to restore health.  We believe all people should be free to use them.  HB 1175 puts no limitation on the use of any natural therapy by any person. Where does this misleading information come from?  Who would wish to distort the impact this bill would have so completely?   It is not as many guess, the medical doctors.  Both the Colorado Medical Society and the Colorado Association of Family Physicians support passage of HB 1175. The only individuals who will be indirectly affected by the bill are those practitioners who falsely claim to be naturopathic doctors.  There are home study courses that award ‘naturopathic doctor’ degrees.  These programs do not meet the educational standards required by the accrediting body for naturopathic medical schools and so are not accredited by the U.S. Department of Education.  As a result, students who complete home study programs are prohibited from using the title ‘doctor’ in Colorado.  This prohibition does not come from HB 1175.  It comes from the long standing provisions of the Consumer Protection Act.   The Colorado Consumer Protection Acts prohibit anyone using the title ‘doctor’ unless they have graduated from an accredited doctoral degree program.   HB 1175 does not protect any titles except ‘naturopathic doctor.’  It does not limit or define the term ‘naturopath’, ‘traditional naturopath’, or a host of other commonly used descriptive terms for the practice of alternative medicine.  HB 1175 will not prevent practitioners trained through home study from continuing their practices as before.   Practitioners that are currently breaking this law, know that HB 1175, if enacted, would make it more difficult for them to fool the public.   Calling themselves naturopathic doctors apparently is more profitable than describing oneself as a traditional naturopath, lay naturopath, holistic healer or other terms that are and would remain legal to use. These practitioners are apparently the source of these false rumors about what HB 1175.   During past legislative sessions, the chaos created by those who oppose the decriminalization of naturopathic medicine has been sufficient to prevent legislators from approving bills, leaving naturopathic medicine unregulated and our doctors still ‘practicing medicine without a license.’  There are those that argue against any medical regulations because they limit ‘health freedom.’  We do not side with this view.    Instead, even though not included in existing law, we still agree in principle with the premise upheld in the law.  We see the practice of the medical arts as a privilege that one earns through training, proven competence and testing.  To practice medicine and call oneself a doctor, that is to professionally allow a person to put their life and well being into your hands, is a grave responsibility.   It is not a liberty that all should be free and equal to engage in. Rather it is a privilege granted to practitioners by the officers of each state who have been given the authority to protect the public welfare by the citizens of the state.     Our state’s regulations need to catch up with the times and make the required changes to both protect the public from harm and improve patient outcomes.  The law needs to allow naturopathic doctors to practice their art without fear of legal repercussion for simply helping people. In states that already regulate and license ND’s, herbalists continue to practice and teach and many are highly respected by the naturopathic medical community. Homeopaths practice, and also provide respected instruction. In states that license naturopathic doctor’s, health food stores still have robust business, multi-level products continue to be sold, and the lay practice of natural therapies continues.  The difference is that naturopathic doctors practice their art freely. They are able to refer to specialists, work in hospitals and conduct research with university doctors.  They are respected members of the medical community.  They are not criminals. Many of you have already or will soon receive emails asking you to oppose HB 1175.  Before you act in fear and without thinking, remember that the bill only applies to naturopathic doctors and any claims that it will affect anyone else are false.   Passage of this bill will be good for Colorado.  It will encourage the growth and practice of naturopathic medicine.  If you have questions about HB 1175, the best place to way to find answers is by reading the actual bill language.  The current version of House Bill 1175 can be viewed at the Colorado General Assembly  website: http://www.leg.state.co.us/Clics/CLICS2009A/csl.nsf/fsbillcont3/EED6C188F451AFB38725754700782701?Open&file=1175_01.pdf The most telling line in the bill that clarifies all these issues reads: “Nothing in this article shall be construed to apply to a person who is not eligible to register pursuant to section 12-37.7-105” Opposition to HB 1175 is opposition to the growth of all natural medicine in Colorado.  Passage of this bill and the decriminalization of naturopathic doctors could be the start of great things in Colorado.  Another college could open and train naturopathic doctors?  Our state should be in the vanguard of natural health not in the dark ages. I encourage you to forward this email to all your contacts in Colorado who might be mislead into opposing the growth of natural medicine in Colorado. Further information on the progress of HB 1175 can be found on our association website:  www.CoANP.orgJacob Schor, ND

A response to Colorado’s HB 1175

Politics | Comments (3) Tyler @ 9:33 am

I was given this by a CNME ND and asked to share this information: 

 * The CNME “Naturopathic Doctors” seek to register or license only themselves – 97 total “Doctors” in the state of Colorado. (these few practitioners attended one of the six “chosen” schools that exist in North America & Canada)… The AANP/CNME graduates have been attempting to pass exclusionary and monopolistic legislation, to take total control of the naturopathic profession in Colorado and the entire country.

 


ND’s have been to a school recognized by the US Dept of Ed, we want to make it legal to call ourselves doctors. The consumer protection act otherwise prohibits this, so people who went to Clayton are already prohibited from calling themselves doctors. This law simply makes it legal for those with the recognized schooling to do so.* No exemptions within this bill exist for classically trained homeopaths, nutritional counselors, herbalists, lifestyle counselors and coaches, or nutraceutical representatives, and businesses. 16,000 Coloradans would NOT be able to practiceThere is no exemption because the bill does not pertain to any of these people. HB 1175 does NOT change their status or their ability to do whatever they chose. They simply can’t call themselves Naturopathic Doctors and we can. It is a COMPLETE lie that it would affect 16,000 other people. It does not. In fact, in states that are already licensed, homeopaths, herbalists, etc continue to thrive and work well with NDs.* Second and any subsequent offenses would be a Class 6 felony, punishable by up to three years in prison and up to a $100,000 fine.Someone found to be practicing as a Naturopathic Doctor outside the temporary scope of practice that has been set up too look at the practice of naturopathic medicine in the State of Colorado, could be punished as above. If a person is a homeopath and is practicing homeopathy or is an herbalist and is practicing as an herbalist, or someone else is selling or using vitamins as a health coach, they are NOT affected, in any way.· Stress the fact that the Dept of Regulatory Agencies (DORA) would need to be augmented, and our state DOES NOT have the money right now.Decisions to protect consumers by creating a task force, which is paid for by the NDs, happen whether the economy is good or bad. This bill does cost the state money.· Then, all cases that DORA might get a hold of (such as holistic practices being prosecuted as felonies) would then be sent to the DA’s office (more cost). The DA needs to be available (time and $) for prosecuting true criminal cases, not benign holistics.Holistic practioners are not affected by this bill and can continue to practice so they would not be prosecuted for anything. If people call themselves NDs, it is meant to imply that they have attended a four year naturopathic medical doctoral program, recognized by the US Dept of Ed, so if people are falsely representing themselves as NDs, they could be investigated. If people call themselves doctors at this time, they are violating the consumer protection act, therefore, ND’s would like legally be recognized as doctors. We have no interest in not including others. If others go to schools where their doctorate degrees are recognized by the US Dept of Ed, we would love to include them. Clayton College has known for many, many years that their doctorate degrees are not recognized by the Dept of Ed and has never pursued trying to do so. * 16,000 holistics practitioners not able to work X $20K yearly average income = massive loss of state income tax revenue & state sales tax. (not exactly a DORA decision, but $ are $, and this committee makes $ decisions)The bill doesn’t affect them. They can still practice as homeopaths, health coaches, herbalists, etc. and therefore still have an income.* Vote NO on HB 1175 because this bill would continue to grow the size of the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies at a time when other more deserving state agencies are suffering massive cuts and jobs are being lost in droves in the private sector.What a poor argument. NDs pay for the task force, not the State of Colorado.Fear is never a good motivator. What could possibly create such fear? In states that licence NDs, NDs pay large sums of money to the state yearly to maintain licenses, benefiting the state economy.In state that license NDs, herbalists and herb companies thrive. Homeopaths can make good incomes. Many of these individuals choose collaboration over fear and create healthy relationships with NDs, whereby there is cross-referral. It is already happening in other states.As fellow practitioners of the healing arts, we could only benefit in continuing to work collaboratively with homeopaths, herbalists, health coaches, etc. We simply want our doctorate degree recognized so that we can practice legally.

New Mexico’s The Unlicensed Health Care Practice Act

Politics | Comments (1) Tyler @ 9:29 am

I recently got news of New Mexico’s “Unlicencsed Health Care Practice Act. The email was orignally sent by a Richard McDonald. 

Hey, Everyone,    I wanted to pass along the good news from New Mexico…   We passed  our Alternative Health Care bill today, in the last 15 minutes of the  2009 legislative session…. with a UNANIMOUS vote!  36 to zip!!    The bill is called “The Unlicensed Health Care Practice Act”, and  provides protection for ALL currently unlicensed health care  traditions, and those who practice them.   We have been told by  Governor Richardsons office that he intends to sign the bill into  law …. probably on Tuesday!!    Now, One more state has a “health freedom” bill  enacted.    Hopefully, more and more states will follow our lead, until we reach  a point where 2/3′s of the states are on board, and we can push for a  Constitutional amendment … to include freedom of choice in matters  of health care…    I am hoping that this small victory for our state and for the way we  practice herbal medicine, can be seen as a fitting tribute to the  best teacher I’ve ever had; the man who will always be the  “Godfather” of modern herbal medicine… Michael Moore.

COLORADO 4 HEALTH FREEDOM-Flyer

May 15, 2008 Politics | Comments (1) Tyler @ 7:45 pm

COLORADO 4 HEALTH FREEDOM

 

Thank you to everyone who helped us to defeat the Naturopathic Physician bill!  We appreciate how everyone helped to call, fax, email legislators and attend hearings! 

 

We still need help.  We were told the NP bill will be back again next session, and we will need to work on defeating it again.  There may also be other bills we might need to defeat.  We are also hoping there will be a health freedom bill to pass.

 

There is an estimated 16,000 alternative health care practitioners in Colorado.  There are thousands more consumers.  We need to educate the public on health freedom. 

 

There are so many people to contact, that it is impossible to contact everyone individually.  Because of this, it is very important that everyone joins the yahoogroup that we have set up.  This is the way we are informing and alerting people when issues arise.


To join this yahoo group, send a blank e-mail to: CO4HFG-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
If you have any problems joining, please email Kim at
kimberlysharples@msn.com and she can assist you with this.

For those who do not have Internet access, an updated message number has been setup for your convenience. We will leave messages to keep you informed of important information and legislation. This is available 24/7. Just dial 1-641-715-3900 and enter code 9357483#  You do have the ability to leave a message at this number and someone will return your call.

 

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact any of the steering committee members listed below:

 

Joanie Sevcik – joaniesevcik@qwest.net – 303-798-1469

    CO4HF Steering Committee Member and CO CNH President

 

Sheryl Strom – nana4health@comcast.net – 303-904-4532

    CO4HF Steering Committee Member and CO CNH Vice-President

 

Kimberly Matteo – dr.matteo@yahoo.com – 720-335-6556

    CO4HF Steering Committee Member – SHFF CO State Coordinator

 

Jacquelyn Pinkham – jkpinkham@msn.com – 970-245-5772

    CO4HF Steering Committee Member and SHFF CO State Coordinator

 

Kimberly Sharples – kimberlysharples@msn.com – 719-390-1979

   CO4HF Steering Committee Member and Health Freedom Activist

 

Amendments to the ND bill-HB1064 in Colorado

March 8, 2008 Politics | Comments Off Tyler @ 7:33 pm

Amendments to HB1064

Amendments to HB1064 part 2

Article from Rocky Mountain News about ND Bill in Colorado

March 6, 2008 Politics | Comments (5) Tyler @ 3:50 pm
Body: Naturopathy – a healthy debate

Holistic treatments’ supporters swear by it, while its detractors glare at it

Joyzelle Davis, Rocky Mountain News
Thursday, March 1, 2007

Audress Johnson needed to retool her strict vegetarian diet, but she said doctors provided no help.

She went outside the traditional medical tent to a naturopath – an expert who specializes in vitamins, herbs and other holistic treatments. These healers don’t have degrees as doctors of medicine.

“I wanted someone who had extensive nutritional training and wouldn’t give me the conventional ‘milk and fish oil cures everything,’ ” said Johnson, who is allergic to milk.

Her naturopath added more leafy greens, nuts and supplements to her diet, restoring Johnson’s vigor and making the Littleton aerospace engineer the latest convert to the ranks who believe the profession needs official respect.
But not everyone’s buying it. Medical doctors are concerned about the profession’s growing popularity, and now the legislature is weighing whether to make Colorado the 15th state to license and regulate naturopathic doctors.

“They take medical practices from a gamut of backgrounds – ayurvedic, Chinese herbs, aromatherapy . . . Practically everything except Western medicine,” said Dr. Mark Johnson, executive director of the Jefferson County Health Department. “Their determination of what is good and safe medicine is very dangerous.”

Naturopaths have long been regarded with skepticism by the health care system, but they’re becoming an increasingly popular alternative for patients who are frustrated with conventional treatments.

More than 37 percent of U.S. Households use some form of alternative medicine, according to a report released last month by Thomson Medstat, led by individuals whose annual incomes exceed $100,000. Integrative medicare centers, where medical doctors practice alongside specialists in traditional Chinese medicine and other alternative therapies, have popped up at establishments such as University Hospital and HealthOne’s Swedish Medical Center.

A bill to license naturopaths, sponsored by Rep. Jeanne Labuda, D-Denver, was passed by the House Health and Human Services Committee last month on a 9-2 vote and is now before the Appropriations Committee.
To qualify under the bill, naturopaths will need a degree from a four-year graduate school and must pass a national exam.

The Colorado Medical Society opposes the legislation, saying naturopathic medical schools don’t provide enough training and that some practices – such as an aversion to immunizations – might harm patients and community health.

Naturopaths disagree, saying they often work closely with doctors in cases such as helping a chemotherapy patient manage side effects. They note that, during the 1960s and ’70s, doctors raised similar objections over chiropractors, who are now licensed in all 50 states.

Proponents say the bill is necessary to protect patients from visiting doctors who went to “diploma mill” correspondence schools that don’t require an undergraduate degree or a grounding in basic science.

“Naturopathic medicine is here to stay, and it’s our duty to protect the public,” said Rena Bloom, president of the Colorado Association of Naturopathic Physicians.

Only about 90 naturopaths in Colorado hold degrees from the four U.S. Schools accredited by the Council on Naturopathic Medical Education, and they often hold licenses in other states, including Oregon. Hundreds more are self-taught or earned degrees elsewhere.

Many of those naturopaths oppose the law, saying graduates of four-year programs are trying to artificially restrict the job market and that a license won’t guarantee public safety.

“This isn’t about protecting the public, it’s about protecting the profession,” said Boyd Landry, head of the Washington-based trade group the Coalition for Natural Health.

Passage by the entire state House and Senate isn’t guaranteed. The legislature balked at similar bills in the 1990s. But this time, the bill’s backers have the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies on their side, which, in late 2005, recommended licensing the profession.

Most health insurers don’t pay for naturopathic therapies now, and that isn’t expected to change if naturopaths are licensed in the state. Some states, such as Washington and Connecticut, require insurance companies to cover naturopathic services.

Alfred Gilchrist, executive director of the Colorado Medical Society, said his group supports the bill’s intent to protect public safety and would like to work with legislators to reach a middle ground, such as creating a registry of naturopaths in the state.

In a nutshell

What is naturopathy? A system of health care based on the philosophy that the human body has the power to heal itself by restoring its natural balance. Naturopathy encompasses practices including nutritional therapy, homeopathy and hydrotherapy.

What the House bill would do: Limit the use of “naturopathic doctor” to grad- uates of accredited naturopathic medical schools who pass a national exam and pay a fee. Licensed doctors could perform common diagnostic procedures, radiography and minor office procedures such as stitching minor wounds.

davisj@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-954-2514

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