Chapter 062
2021 -- H 5154
Enacted 06/25/2021

A N   A C T
RELATING TO BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS -- THE HEALING ART OF ACUPUNCTURE AND ORIENTAL MEDICINE

Introduced By: Representative David A. Bennett

Date Introduced: January 25, 2021

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. The title of Chapter 5-37.2 of the General Laws entitled "The Healing Art of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine" is hereby amended to read as follows:
CHAPTER 5-37.2
The Healing Art of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine
CHAPTER 5-37.2
THE PRACTICE OF ACUPUNCTURE AND CHINESE MEDICINE
     SECTION 2. Sections 5-37.2-1, 5-37.2-1.1, 5-37.2-2, 5-37.2-7, 5-37.2-8.1, 5-37.2-9, 5-
37.2-10, 5-37.2-12, 5-37.2-12.1, 5-37.2-12.2, 5-37.2-12.3, 5-37.2-14, 5-37.2-15, 5-37.2-18, 5-37.2-
19, 5-37.2-20 and 5-37.2-21 of the General Laws in Chapter 5-37.2 entitled "The Healing Art of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine" are hereby amended to read as follows:
     5-37.2-1. Legislative declaration -- Acupuncture and Oriental medicine Legislative
declaration -- Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine.
     The practice of the healing art of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine, and any
branch of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine, is declared to be a learned profession,
affecting public safety and welfare and charged with the public interest, and subject to protection
and regulation by the state.
     5-37.2-1.1. Board of acupuncture and Oriental medicine Board of acupuncture and
Chinese medicine.
     (a) The director of the department shall appoint a board of acupuncture and Oriental
Chinese medicine. The board shall consist of five (5) members, all of whom shall be residents of
the state, four (4) of whom shall be doctors of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine licensed
by the department and engaged in the practice of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine in the
state for at least five (5) years prior to their appointment, and there shall be one public member.
The members shall be appointed for terms of three (3) years; each member may serve a maximum
of two (2) consecutive, full terms. No member of the board of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese
medicine shall receive compensation for his or her attendance at meetings of the board.
     (b) The director of health may remove any member from the board for neglect of any duty
required by law or for any incompetency, unprofessional, or dishonorable conduct. Vacancies
created by voluntary resignation or removal by the director of health shall be filled in the same
manner as the original appointment was made for the remainder of the term.
     5-37.2-2. Definitions.
     Unless the context otherwise requires, the words, phrases, and derivatives employed in this
chapter have the meanings ascribed to them in this section:
     (1) "Acupuncture" means the insertion of needles into the human body by piercing the skin
of the body, for the purpose of controlling and regulating the flow of energy and blood in the body
physiology.
     (2) "Acupuncture and Chinese medicine" means a form of health care, with a foundation
in classical and modern Chinese medical concepts and theory, that employs Chinese medical
diagnostic methods such as pulse, tongue, palpation, and observational diagnosis, as well as
diagnostic techniques based on newer scientific models. "Acupuncture and Chinese medicine"
includes acupuncture and adjunct therapies for the promotion, maintenance, or restoration of health,
and the treatment, or prevention, of any ailment. The techniques and adjunct therapies of
"Acupuncture and Chinese medicine" may include acupuncture, electro-acupuncture, laser
acupuncture, moxibustion (heat therapy), cupping, TDP and infrared lamps, manual therapies such
as gua sha, cupping, and tui na, corrective exercises such as Qi Gong, Chinese herbal medicine,
dietary therapy, breathing exercises, and life-style lifestyle change consultations.
     (3) "Auricular acudetox", also known as "5 Needle Protocol", "5NP", or "NADA protocol"
means a standardized point auricular acupuncture protocol, consisting of five (5) points:
Sympathetic, Shen Men, Liver, Kidney, and Lung, and was developed by the National Acupuncture
Detox Association (NADA) as an adjunct therapy for the treatment of addiction, substance use
disorder, mental and behavioral health, trauma, and for relief in disaster settings.
     (4) "Auricular acupuncture technician (AAT)" means a qualified individual, as defined in
this section, with auricular acupuncture technician training based on the program developed by
NADA, and is delivered by NADA, or its equivalent.
     (5) "Chinese herbal medicine" means traditional combinations of raw, granular
preparations of herbs to produce formulas from Chinese herbal literature, the modification of those
traditional combinations, or the writing of new formulas to address individual symptom
presentations, through addition, deletion, substitution, or change in dosages of ingredients and the
dispensing of these herbal preparations to patients, including in pill, tablet, capsule, or liquid form.
     (2)(6) "Department" means the state department of health.
     (7) "Doctor of acupuncture" means a person licensed under the provisions of this chapter
to practice acupuncture and Chinese medicine.
     (3)(8) "Doctor of Acupuncture acupuncture and Oriental Chinese Medicine medicine"
means a person licensed under the provisions of this chapter to practice the art of healing known as
acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine, and who has additional training, experience or
certification to practice Chinese herbal medicine.
     (4) "Oriental medicine" means a form of health care, based on classical Chinese medical
concepts and modern Oriental medical techniques, that employs Chinese medical diagnosis such
as pulse, tongue, palpatory, and observational diagnosis, as well as acupuncture therapies and
diagnostic techniques based on newer scientific models for the assessment, treatment, prevention,
and cure of any disease with the purpose of full health restoration. The techniques and modalities
of Oriental medicine include acupuncture, electro-acupuncture, laser acupuncture, moxibustion
(heat therapy), cupping, TDP and infrared lamps, Tuina, Qi Gong, Gwa/sha, thermography, herbal
GMP standardized therapy, homeopathy and supplement therapy, Chinese dieting therapy,
breathing exercises, and lifestyle change consultations.
     (9) "General supervision" means, but is not limited to, availability by telephone or other
electronic means during business hours.
     (10) "National Acupuncture Detoxification Association" or "NADA" means a not-for-
profit organization that provides a certificate of acudetox training.
     (11) "Qualified individual" means a licensed nurse, clinical social worker, mental health
counselor, certified peer recovery specialist, or certified alcohol or chemical dependency
professional, trained and certified in auricular acudetox. A qualified individual is required to be
under general supervision of a licensed acupuncturist pursuant to this chapter 37.2 of this title.
     5-37.2-7. Powers of department.
     For the purpose of conducting its responsibilities under this chapter, the department shall:
     (1) Engage persons of established reputation and known ability in acupuncture and or
Oriental Chinese medicine as consultants to the department; the Rhode Island Society of
Acupuncture, and Oriental Medicine and any other professional association of acupuncture and or
Oriental Chinese medicine are designated as appropriate bodies with which the department shall
consult for referral of consultants and other assistance to the department;
     (2) Maintain an office in the state to carry out the provisions of this chapter;
     (3) Promulgate rules and regulations, or either of them, not inconsistent with the provisions
of this chapter. These rules and regulations may include a code of ethics regulating the professional
conduct of licensees; and
     (4) Compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of evidence by subpoena and
administer oaths.
     5-37.2-8.1. License required.
     (a) Unless licensed as a doctor of acupuncture and Oriental or Chinese medicine under this
chapter, or exempt from licensure under the provisions of this chapter, no person shall practice or
hold himself or herself out as practicing, or engaging in the practice of, acupuncture and Oriental
Chinese medicine, either for compensation or gratuitously.
     (b) This chapter shall not be construed to make unlawful the activities of persons involved
in research performed under the auspices of a federal- or state-regulated research institution.
     5-37.2-9. Special licensing.
     (a) Upon application to the department prior to July 1, 1980, any person who has been an
instructor in the art of acupuncture and Oriental or Chinese medicine at a domestic or foreign
college or university satisfactory to the department for a period of two (2) years and who has had
at least ten (10) years' experience, shall be granted a license by the department as a doctor of
acupuncture and Oriental or doctor of acupuncture and Chinese medicine without the necessity of
taking an examination.
     (b) An acupuncturist, licensed and in good standing to practice acupuncture in another
jurisdiction, may perform acupuncture or acupuncture and Chinese medicine while teaching or
demonstrating or providing acupuncture in connection with teaching or participating in an
educational seminar in Rhode Island.
     (c) An auricular acupuncture technician, qualified and trained to perform 5NP, may
perform the procedure within that individual's current scope of practice; provided, that the
individual obtains a certificate of training from a recognized organization or agency that meets or
exceeds NADA training.
     (d) Acudetox may be performed by auricular acupuncture technicians working in, or in
collaboration with, behavioral health and health care healthcare agencies, or other state-approved
programs or agencies.
     (e) Any complaints filed against an auricular acupuncture technician relating to the
performance of any 5NP procedure shall be handled by the licensing board or department in
conformance with the requirements of that individual's health care healthcare license or
certification.
     (f) Any individual performing 5NP shall not use the title "acupuncturist" or "doctor of
acupuncture" or "doctor of acupuncture and Chinese medicine," as defined in § 5-37.2-2, or
otherwise represent himself or herself as an acupuncture professional and shall not perform
acupuncture outside of the scope of the auricular acudetox procedure.
     (g) Nothing in this chapter is intended to limit, interfere with, or prevent a certified
auricular acupuncture technician from practicing within the scope of their certification.
     5-37.2-10. Application for licenses -- Fees.
     An applicant for examination for a license to practice acupuncture and Oriental Chinese
medicine or any branch of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine shall:
     (1) Submit an application to the department on forms provided by the department;
     (2) Submit satisfactory evidence that he or she the applicant is twenty-one (21) years or
older and meets the appropriate education requirements;
     (3) Pay a fee as set forth in § 23-1-54; and
     (4) Pay any fees required by the department for an investigation of the applicant or for the
services of a translator, if required, to enable the applicant to take the examination.
     5-37.2-12. Issuance of licenses to practice acupuncture.
     The department shall issue a license for the practice of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese
medicine where the applicant meets the requirements of § 5-37.2-12.1 except as exempted.
     5-37.2-12.1. Examination requirements and issuance of license.
     (a) No person shall be licensed as a doctor of acupuncture and Oriental or doctor of
acupuncture and Chinese medicine unless he or she the person has passed the examination by the
National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine or successor entity a
credentialing body approved by the department.
     (b) Before any applicant is eligible for licensure, he or she shall furnish satisfactory proof
that he or she the applicant:
     (1) Is a United States citizen or legal alien;
     (2) Has demonstrated proficiency in the English language;
     (3) Is at least twenty-one (21) years of age;
     (4) Is of good moral character;
     (5) Has completed an accredited program of at least thirty-six (36) months and not less than
twenty-five hundred (2,500) one thousand nine hundred five (1,905) hours of training and has
received a certificate or diploma from an institute approved by the Accreditation Commission for
Schools and Colleges of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, or any accrediting body approved by
the department, according to the provisions of this chapter; provided, that this subdivision does not
apply to anyone licensed to practice under chapter 37 of this title who is qualified to take and pass
the test by the National Commission for the Certification of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine
National Certification Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, or any credentialing
body meeting the standards for professional certification programs approved by the department;
     (6) Has completed a clinical internship training that is designated as appropriate by the
National Commission for the Certification of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine Accreditation
Commission for the Schools and Colleges of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine (ACAOM) or
any credentialing body meeting the standards for professional certification programs approved by
the department; and
     (7) Has three (3) two (2) letters of reference from reputable individuals other than relatives
and at least two (2), one of which are is from a licensed or registered doctors doctor of acupuncture
and Oriental medicine or doctor of acupuncture and Chinese medicine.
     (c) Additional certification for the practice of Chinese herbal medicine.
     (1) A licensed acupuncturist is required to demonstrate that he or she the licensee is
qualified by training, experience, or certification to practice Chinese herbal medicine. The
department shall adopt rules specifying the training required for licensed acupuncturists to obtain
the certification to practice Chinese herbal medicine.
     (2) Licensees who obtained licensure prior to January 1, 2022, and employ herbal therapy,
including herbal formulations, and who submitted evidence of herbal training that the department
has determined was substantially equivalent or exceeded the ACAOM curricular requirements
regarding Chinese herbal medicine may continue to employ herbal therapy and may be granted a
doctor of acupuncture and Chinese medicine license by the department.
     (3) A licensee who is licensed on or after January 1, 2022, and who completed an ACAOM
accredited or candidate status Oriental medicine program, or Traditional traditional Chinese
medicine program, or who completed an herbal medicine program that the department determined
was substantially equivalent or exceeded the ACAOM curriculum requirements regarding herbal
medicine, or who has passed the Chinese herbal medicine examination by the National Certification
Commission for Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine or a credentialing body approved the
department, may continue to employ Chinese herbal medicine therapy, during the course of
treatment if the licensee has obtained department approval to employ herbal therapy, and shall be
granted a doctor of acupuncture and Chinese medicine license.
     (d) All licensees pursuant to this chapter shall adhere to procedures that employ the use of
disposable, single-use, sterile needles, with proper handling and disposal, and that follow the
provisions of universal precautions.
     5-37.2-12.2. Reciprocal licensing requirements.
     The health department may, at its discretion, issue a license without examination to a doctor
of acupuncture or doctor of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine who has been licensed,
certified, or formally legally recognized as an acupuncturist in any state or territory if all three (3)
of the following conditions are met to its satisfaction:
     (1) The applicant meets the requirements of practice in the state or territory in which the
applicant is licensed, certified, or registered as an acupuncturist; and
     (2) The requirements for practice in the state or territory in which the applicant is licensed,
certified, or registered as an acupuncturist are at least as stringent as those of this state.; and
     (3) The state or territory in which the applicant is licensed, certified, or legally recognized
as an acupuncturist permits a practitioner licensed in this state to practice acupuncture and Oriental
medicine in that jurisdiction.
     5-37.2-12.3. Continuing education for acupuncture and Oriental medicine Continuing
education for acupuncture and Chinese medicine.
     The health department shall establish, by regulation, mandatory continuing education
requirements for a doctor of acupuncture and Oriental a doctor of acupuncture and Chinese
medicine licensed in this state, including, but not limited to, the following:
     (1) Each person licensed under this chapter, whether or not residing within this state, shall
complete forty (40) hours of continuing education within each biennial renewal period, except
during the initial annual renewal period.
     (2) Continuing education hours will be accepted by the department for course work that
has been presented, accepted, or approved by a nationally recognized acupuncture and Oriental
Chinese medicine organization or its local chapter, or any accredited school of acupuncture and
Oriental Chinese medicine.
     (3) At the time of license renewal, each licensee is required to attest to the fact of having
complied with the requirements in this section. Course descriptions, proof of attendance, or other
documentation of completion will be retained by the licensee for a minimum of three (3) years and
is subject to random audit by the department. Failure to produce satisfactory documentation of
completion upon request by the department constitutes grounds for disciplinary action under the
provisions of this chapter.
     (4) Each person not obtaining the required number of hours of continuing education may
have his or her license renewed for just cause, as determined by the department, so long as the
department requires that the deficient hours of continuing education, and all unpaid fees, are made
up during the following renewal period in addition to the current continuing education requirements
for the renewal period. If any doctor of acupuncture and Oriental or doctor of acupuncture and
Chinese medicine fails to make up the deficient hours and complete the subsequent renewal period,
or fails to make up unpaid fees, then his or her license shall not be renewed until all fees are paid
and all the required hours are completed and documented to the department.
     5-37.2-14. Recordation and display of licenses -- Annual registration fee -- Penalties
for failure to pay fee.
     (a) Every person holding a license authorizing him or her the person to practice
acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine in this state shall record his or her the person’s license
with the city or town hall in the city or town where his or her office and residence are located. Every
licensee upon a change of residence or office shall have his or her certificate recorded in the same
manner in the municipality to which he or she has changed.
     (b) Every license shall be displayed in the office, place of business, or place of employment
of the license holder.
     (c) Every person holding a license shall pay to the department, on or before February 1 of
each year, the annual registration fee required pursuant to department rules and regulation. If the
holder of a license fails to pay the registration fee, his or her the holder’s license shall be
suspended. The license may be reinstated by payment of the required fee within ninety (90) days
after February 1.
     (d) A license that is suspended for more than three (3) months under the provisions of
subsection (c) may be canceled by the board after thirty (30) days' notice to the holder of the license.
     (e) [Deleted by P.L. 2007, ch. 73, art. 39, § 11.]
     5-37.2-15. Suspension, revocation, or refusal of license -- Grounds.
     The department may either refuse to issue or may suspend or revoke any license for any
one or any combination of the following causes:
     (1) Conviction of a felony, conviction of any offense involving moral turpitude, or
conviction of a violation of any state or federal law regulating the possession, distribution, or use
of any controlled substance as defined in § 21-28-1.02, as shown by a certified copy of record of
the court;
     (2) The obtaining of, or any attempt to obtain, a license, or to practice in the profession for
money or any other thing of value, by fraudulent misrepresentations;
     (3) Gross malpractice;
     (4) Advertising by means of knowingly false or deceptive statement;
     (5) Advertising, practicing, or attempting to practice under a name other than one's own;
     (6) Habitual drunkenness or habitual addiction to the use of a controlled substance as
defined in § 21-28-1.02;
     (7) Using any false, fraudulent, or forged statement or document, or engaging in any
fraudulent, deceitful, dishonest, immoral practice in connection with the licensing requirement of
this chapter;
     (8) Sustaining a physical or mental disability that renders further practice dangerous;
     (9) Engaging in any dishonorable, unethical, or unprofessional conduct that may deceive,
defraud, or harm the public, or that is unbecoming a person licensed to practice under this chapter;
     (10) Using any false or fraudulent statement in connection with the practice of acupuncture
or any branch of acupuncture;
     (11) Violating, or attempting to violate, or assisting or abetting the violation of, or
conspiring to violate, any provision of this chapter;
     (12) Being adjudicated incompetent or insane;
     (13) Advertising in an unethical or unprofessional manner;
     (14) Obtaining a fee or financial benefit for any person by the use of fraudulent diagnosis,
therapy, or treatment;
     (15) Willfully disclosing a privileged communication;
     (16) Failure of a licensee to designate his or her school of practice in the professional use
of his or her name by the term "doctor of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine";
     (17) Willful violation of the law relating to the health, safety, or welfare of the public, or
of the rules and regulations promulgated by the state board of health;
     (18) Administering, dispensing, or prescribing any controlled substance as defined in § 21-
28-1.02, except for the prevention, alleviation, or cure of disease or for relief from suffering; and
     (19) Performing, assisting, or advising in the injection of any liquid silicone substance into
the human body.
     5-37.2-18. Reporting vital statistics.
     Doctors of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine shall observe and be subject to all
state and municipal regulations relative to reporting all births and deaths in all matters pertaining
to the public health.
     5-37.2-19. Seminars not in accordance with department regulations prohibited --
Penalty.
     (a) No seminar concerning acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine may be conducted
in this state except in accordance with regulations prescribed by the department for bona fide
educational seminars.
     (b) Any person who violates subsection (a) of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor.
     5-37.2-20. Practice without a license a misdemeanor.
     A person who represents himself or herself as a practitioner of acupuncture and Oriental
Chinese medicine, or any branch of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine, and who engages
in the practice of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine, or any branch of acupuncture and
Oriental Chinese medicine, in this state without holding a valid license issued by the department is
guilty of a misdemeanor.
     5-37.2-21. Injunctive relief.
     (a) The department may maintain in any court of competent jurisdiction a suit for an
injunction against any person or persons practicing acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine, or
any branch of acupuncture and Oriental Chinese medicine, without a license.
     (b) This injunction:
     (1) May be issued without proof of actual damage sustained by any person, this provision
being understood to be a preventive as well as a punitive measure.
     (2) Shall not relieve the person from criminal prosecution for practicing without a license.
     SECTION 3. Chapter 5-37.2 of the General Laws entitled "The Healing Art of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following section:
     5-37.2-24. Meaning of terms in existing laws.
     When in any law, resolution, document, record, instrument, proceeding, or other place the
words "Oriental medicine" as applied in this chapter appear, they shall be construed to mean
"Chinese medicine".
     SECTION 4. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC000095
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