California Acupuncture Board

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FormedJanuary 1, 1999 (1999-01-01)
Preceding agencies
  • Acupuncture Advisory Committee
  • Acupuncture Examining Committee
TypeRegulatory Board
JurisdictionCalifornia
California Acupuncture Board
Official Seal
Official logo
Board overview
FormedJanuary 1, 1999 (1999-01-01)
Preceding agencies
  • Acupuncture Advisory Committee
  • Acupuncture Examining Committee
TypeRegulatory Board
JurisdictionCalifornia
Headquarters1625 North Market Blvd., Suite N-219 Sacramento, California
Employees12 (2024) [1]
Annual budget$3.8 million (2024) [1]
Board executives
  • John C. Harabedian, Board President
  • Yong Ping Chen, Board Vice President
Parent boardCalifornia Department of Consumer Affairs
Child agencies
  • Licensing Committee
  • Executive and Legislative Committee
  • Enforcement Committee[2]
Key document
Websiteacupuncture.ca.gov

The California Acupuncture Board is a regulatory body under the California Department of Consumer Affairs. The board is responsible for the regulation of the practice of Asian medicine across the state. They are the sole issuer of acupuncture licenses and regulate all 12,185 active licensed acupuncturists in California.[3]

California began regulating acupuncture in 1972 under the jurisdiction of the Board of Medical Examiners. In 1975, Senate Bill 86 established the Acupuncture Advisory Committee. It allowed patients to seek acupuncture practices with the referral of a licensed physician, chiropractor, or dentist. In 1976, California became the 8th state to license acupuncturists. In 1978, referral requirements were eliminated.

The board was abolished in 1980 and replaced with the Acupuncture Examining Committee within the Division of Allied Health Professions, having limited autonomous authority. The state expanded the definition of acupuncture to include electroacupuncture, cupping, and moxibustion and added Asian massages, exercises, and nutritional herbs within the scope of acupuncture practices. The Acupuncture Examining Committee Fund was also established, allowing the board to operate independently of the Medical Board's fund.

In 1982, the board was designated an autonomous body. Acupuncturists were included as physicians within the Workers' Compensation System in 1989. On January 1, 1990, the board was renamed the Acupuncture Committee via AB 2367, Chapter, 1249, Statutes of 1989, before being renamed again on January 1, 1999, to the California Acupuncture Board under SB 1980, Chapter 991, Statutes of 1998 and was removed from the jurisdiction of the Medical Board of California under SB 1981, Chapter 736, Statutes of 1998, becoming an autonomous body under the California Department of Consumer Affairs.[4]

Functions

The board conducts four meetings per year, with a quorum of four members, one of which must be a licensed member. Additional meetings are hosted as needed. They are responsible for policy direction, decision-making, and administering the Acupuncture Licensure Act. The board contains six specialized units: licensing, examination, education, enforcement, administrative, and policy units.[3]

Board

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI