22 Tex. Admin. Code § 184.1 - Definitions
The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
(1) Acupuncture Act or "the
Act"--Texas Occupations Code, Chapter 205.
(2) Acupuncture Board or "board"--The Texas
State Board of Acupuncture Examiners.
(3) Acceptable approved acupuncture
school--Effective January 1, 1996, and in addition to and consistent with the
requirements of §205.206 of the Act:
(A)
a school of acupuncture located in the United States or Canada which, at the
time of the applicant's graduation, was a candidate for accreditation by the
Accreditation Commission for Acupuncture and Herbal Medicine (ACAHM) or another
accrediting body recognized by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board,
provides certification that the curriculum at the time of the applicant's
graduation was equivalent to the curriculum upon which accreditation granted,
offered a master's degree or a professional certificate or diploma upon
graduation, and had a curriculum of 1,800 hours with at least 450 hours of
herbal studies which at a minimum included the following:
(i) basic herbology including recognition,
nomenclature, functions, temperature, taste, contraindications, and therapeutic
combinations of herbs;
(ii) herbal
formulas including traditional herbal formulas and their modifications or
variations based on traditional methods of herbal therapy;
(iii) patent herbs including the names of the
more common patent herbal medications and their uses; and
(iv) clinical training emphasizing herbal
uses; or
(B) a school of
acupuncture located in the United States or Canada which, at the time of the
applicant's graduation, was accredited by ACAHM or another accrediting body
recognized by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, offered a master's
degree or a professional certificate or diploma upon graduation, and had a
curriculum of 1,800 hours with at least 450 hours of herbal studies which at a
minimum included the following:
(i) basic
herbology including recognition, nomenclature, functions, temperature, taste,
contraindications, and therapeutic combinations of herbs;
(ii) herbal formulas including traditional
herbal formulas and their modifications or variations based on traditional
methods of herbal therapy;
(iii)
patent herbs including the names of the more common patent herbal medications
and their uses; and
(iv) clinical
training emphasizing herbal uses; or
(C) a school of acupuncture located outside
the United States or Canada that is determined by the board to be substantially
equivalent to a Texas acupuncture school or a school defined in subparagraph
(B) of this paragraph. An evaluation by the Foreign Credentials Service of
America (FCSA) or an evaluation requested by the board may be utilized when
making a determination of substantial equivalence.
(4) Medical Practice Act -- Texas Occupations
Code Annotated, Title 3, Subtitle B, as amended.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.