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Hi Ivy,
Regulation is on the way that will organize the entire profession. For many years, we have made individual attempts (state by state) to control massage. But with "state rights", it was a patchwork effort at best. Everyone's self interest were paramount instead of the professions'.
State Boards have finally come together with the Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards. This is the organization that was needed to create the guidelines. Working with each other and the industry, a Model Practice Act will be created. It will give one direction and improve the ability of "Portability". Being able to travel between "like-minded" states will enable many therapists to earn more money.
I understand that many therapists want, "to just be left alone"! Sorry! This attitude is why we are still trying, after 5,000 years, to be recognized as part of the undeniable and research proven professional health fields.
Education will increase. Regulations will follow as well. The profession is headed in this direction, not away from it.
A movement towards deregulation of massage? That is totally not true in the US; in fact, it is just the opposite. There are MORE states than ever before regulating massage--43 including Washington DC and Puerto Rico, and that's up from 37 last year at this time. In the past couple of years quite a few states that had no board and no practice act have jumped on the regulatory bandwagon. Only one board (AR) has disbanded that I am aware of, and it will in all likelihood be regrouped or their responsibilities placed under another regulatory board. I don't know where you got that it was being deregulated; I am relatively sure none of our trade journals are irresponsible enough to print such incorrect information. You can find the metrics of the massage profession on ABMP's public education website at www.massagetherapy.com
The freedoms of commerce that are implicit in the due process clause of the 14th amendment, guarantee a right to do business except where there is a countervailing public interest imposed by due process. The Supreme Court ruling of Dent v. State of West Virginia, 129 U.S. 114 (1889) set out the principle that the state can limit the practice of occupations when it implements a needed public protection from harms of incompetence and malfeasance. There is thus, embodied in occupational licensing, a fine constitutional balance between freedom of commerce and intrusion of the police power of the state upon commerce for the benefit of the public. In allowing a state to determine public benefit, the standard of rational basis is normally used, except when the law involves a suspect classification that might involve discrimination (e.g. race, gender, national origin). In this case, the more stringent test of strict scrutiny is applied.
The important principle underlying each of the criteria [for regulation] is that the sole purpose of professional regulation is to advance and protect the public interest. The public is the intended beneficiary of regulation, not the members of the profession. Thus the purpose of granting self-regulation to a profession in not to enhance its status or to increase the earning power of its members by giving the profession a monopoly over the delivery of particular health services. Indeed, although these are common results of traditional regulatory models, they are undesirable results, and the model of regulation we recommend [the RHPA] aims to minimize them.
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