Ijaz Nadine, Carrie Heather
Department of Law and Legal Studies, Faculty of Public Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada.
Heather Carrie Research Associates, Vashon Island, Vashon, Washington, United States of America.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023 Aug 9;3(8):e0001996. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0001996. eCollection 2023.
The World Health Organization has called on nation-states to statutorily govern, and integrate into state-funded healthcare systems, practitioners of traditional and complementary medicine (T&CM) (whose therapeutic approaches that fall outside the boundaries of conventional biomedicine). To date, however, there exist few rigorous reports of the degree to which individual nations have responded to this call. This study, an environmental scan, comprehensively documents the statutory governance and government reimbursement of T&CM practitioners in the United States (US). Across the US, where health practitioner governance falls within state and territorial (rather than federal) jurisdiction, over 300 laws have been enacted to statutorily regulate a wide range of T&CM practitioners. Nurse-midwives and chiropractors are universally licensed across all 56 US regulatory jurisdictions (50 states, 5 territories and the District of Columbia); other major T&CM practitioner groups are regulated in fewer jurisdictions (acupuncturists, n = 52; massage therapists, n = 50; direct-entry [non-nurse] midwives, n = 36; naturopaths, n = 24). Additional statutory stipulations exist to govern chiropractic assistants (n = 30), auricular (ear) acupuncture practitioners (n = 24), homeopathic practitioners (n = 3), and psychedelic facilitators (n = 1), as well as biomedical professionals who practice acupuncture and related techniques, e.g., 'dry needling' (n = 44). While professional entry requirements for licensed T&CM practitioners are substantially harmonized across jurisdictions, restricted titles and statutory scopes of practice vary. Ten states have furthermore implemented 'safe harbor' ('negative licensing') exemption laws enabling otherwise-unregulated T&CM practitioners to legally practice. Limited government reimbursement for T&CM care is available across several federal and state programs, including Medicare, Tricare, Veterans Health Authority, and Medicaid. Nurse-midwifery and chiropractic care is most frequently reimbursed; acupuncturists, naturopaths and massage therapists are eligible for much more limited coverage. Medicaid programs for low-income people in ten states furthermore cover the services of (unlicensed but statutorily-recognized) birth doulas. Additional research is needed to assess the impact of these regulations on US health care.
世界卫生组织呼吁各民族国家对传统和补充医学从业者(其治疗方法超出了传统生物医学的范畴)进行法定管理,并将其纳入国家资助的医疗体系。然而,迄今为止,关于各个国家对这一呼吁的响应程度,几乎没有严格的报告。本研究作为一项环境扫描,全面记录了美国传统和补充医学从业者的法定管理及政府报销情况。在美国,医疗从业者的管理属于州和领地(而非联邦)管辖范围,已颁布了300多项法律,对各类传统和补充医学从业者进行法定监管。助产护士和脊椎按摩师在美国所有56个监管辖区(50个州、5个领地和哥伦比亚特区)均获得普遍许可;其他主要的传统和补充医学从业者群体在较少的辖区受到监管(针灸师,n = 52;按摩治疗师,n = 50;直接准入[非护士]助产士,n = 36;自然疗法医生,n = 24)。还有其他法定规定来管理脊椎按摩助理(n = 30)、耳针(耳部)针灸从业者(n = 24)、顺势疗法从业者(n = 3)和迷幻辅助者(n = 1),以及从事针灸及相关技术(如“干针疗法”)的生物医学专业人员(n = 44)。虽然各辖区对获得许可的传统和补充医学从业者的专业准入要求基本一致,但受限头衔和法定执业范围各不相同。此外,有十个州实施了“安全港”(“负面许可”)豁免法,使原本不受监管的传统和补充医学从业者能够合法执业。在包括医疗保险、军人医疗保健、退伍军人健康管理局和医疗补助在内的多个联邦和州项目中,对传统和补充医学护理的政府报销有限。助产护士和脊椎按摩护理报销最为频繁;针灸师、自然疗法医生和按摩治疗师的报销范围则非常有限。十个州为低收入人群提供的医疗补助项目还涵盖了(无执照但法定认可的)分娩导乐的服务。需要进一步研究来评估这些法规对美国医疗保健的影响。