MASSAGE THERAPIST LICENSING

House Bill 5001 as enacted

Public Act 371 of 2016

Sponsor:  Rep. Dan Lauwers

House Committee:  Regulatory Reform

Senate Committee:  Health Policy

Complete to 7-12-17

BRIEF SUMMARY: House Bill 5001 increases educational requirements for licensure as a massage therapist for applicants enrolled in school on or after August 1, 2017. The bill took effect December 22, 2016.

FISCAL IMPACT:    House Bill 5001 would have no fiscal impact on the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA).

THE CONTENT OF THE BILL:

The bill amends Section 17959 of the Public Health Code (MCL 333.17959) to specify that an individual enrolled in a massage education program on or after August 1, 2017, would need to complete at least 625 hours of classroom instruction as part of the program; until then the current 500-hour requirement would remain in place.  

The same hours requirements would apply to an individual who completed an acceptable "substantially equivalent program" outside Michigan. The bill also strikes a requirement that to be licensed as a massage therapist, an individual must have a high school diploma, as well as language relating to a path to licensure that is no longer available.

Specifically, to become licensed, a person must have successfully completed of one of the following, and provided an academic transcript that is satisfactory to the Michigan Board of Massage Therapy as evidence of successful completion:

(1) A massage education program that meets all of the following:

§  Includes at least 500 hours of classroom instruction to complete the program if the applicant is or was enrolled in the school before August 1, 2017, or at least 625 hours of classroom instruction if the applicant enrolls in the school on or after August 1, 2017.

§  Uses only classroom instruction provided at a physical location where the students and an instructor are present to provide program components that contain psychomotor domain learning, including palpation, hands-on techniques, and clinical or lab experiences, or to provide other program components that the board determines require classroom instruction at a physical location where the students and an instructor are present.

§  All classroom instruction in the program is facilitated by a qualified instructor who is trained in the subject matter being taught, and, if the classroom instruction is provided by distance education, is trained in distance education teaching methods.

OR

(2) At least 500 hours of course and clinical massage education, if enrolled prior to August 1, 2017, as the law already provides, and if enrolled on or after that date, 625 hours (newly added).

            The following terms would also be added by the bill:

"Classroom instruction" would mean educational instruction that is either provided at a physical location where the students and an instructor are present or provided by distance education.

"Distance education" would mean instruction that meets all of the following:

o   Is provided electronically or online.

o   Does not require that the students and the instructor are physically present at the same place.

o   Allows for regular interaction between the students and instructor through a learning management system, online discussion board, live chat, or virtual classroom.

o   Provides a method for unique sign-in for student identification, provides for timely communication between instructors and students, and allows students to monitor their grades and progress.

DISCUSSION AND BACKGROUND:

According to testimony presented in committee, the number of hours required for licensure as a massage therapist in Michigan are among the lowest of the states that license massage therapists. To remedy this, the bill raises the number of hours that an individual must complete in a program in order to meet the licensing requirements.  Presently in Michigan, an individual must either complete a supervised curriculum in a school massage education program that has at least 500 hours of classroom instruction OR complete at least 500 hours of course and clinical massage education in a substantially equivalent program in another state, county, jurisdiction, territory, or providence that, on a case-by-case basis, is found by the Michigan board of massage therapy to be sufficient.  Under the bill, an individual enrolled in a massage education program on or after August 1, 2017, would need to complete at least 625 hours of classroom instruction

                                                                                        Legislative Analyst:   Josh Roesner

                                                                                                Fiscal Analyst:   Paul B.A. Holland

This analysis was prepared by nonpartisan House Fiscal Agency staff for use by House members in their deliberations, and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent.