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The Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards*released the Model Practice Act a few days ago, just after the third anniversary of the announcement they had formed a Task Force of 8 state board members to work on it. I just had the time to read it in its entirety today, and as a former state board member and former delegate to the Federation myself, I appreciate the huge amount of time and effort that went into it.
I didnรขโฌโขt find much that surprised me. Last week when this was first released, I saw some rumblings from educators and school owners about the requirement for massage therapy programs to be 625 hours. As the publication says, it is consistent with the 625-hour recommendation of the recently-released ELAP (Entry-Level Analysis Project) that was a collaborative effort supported by all of the national massage organizations. Since there are currently more than two dozen states that still have 500 hours as their entry-level requirement, thatรขโฌโขs going to require some major changes. Many smaller schools would probably go out of business rather than comply with the change.
The document does not state the name of the NCBTMB or any other entityรขโฌโขs exam in the context of eliminating them, but the definition of รขโฌลexaminationรขโฌ is given as a standardized test or examination of entry-level massage and bodywork knowledge, skills, and abilities that is developed and administered by the Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards. That means the MBLEx, period. About 40 states are currently accepting both the MBLEx and the NCBรขโฌโขs licensing exams. There are also a couple of states that have their own examรขโฌโand require much more than 625 hours. I donรขโฌโขt see that those states will want to back up and adopt this. READ MOREรขโฌยฆ
I didnรขโฌโขt find much that surprised me. Last week when this was first released, I saw some rumblings from educators and school owners about the requirement for massage therapy programs to be 625 hours. As the publication says, it is consistent with the 625-hour recommendation of the recently-released ELAP (Entry-Level Analysis Project) that was a collaborative effort supported by all of the national massage organizations. Since there are currently more than two dozen states that still have 500 hours as their entry-level requirement, thatรขโฌโขs going to require some major changes. Many smaller schools would probably go out of business rather than comply with the change.
The document does not state the name of the NCBTMB or any other entityรขโฌโขs exam in the context of eliminating them, but the definition of รขโฌลexaminationรขโฌ is given as a standardized test or examination of entry-level massage and bodywork knowledge, skills, and abilities that is developed and administered by the Federation of State Massage Therapy Boards. That means the MBLEx, period. About 40 states are currently accepting both the MBLEx and the NCBรขโฌโขs licensing exams. There are also a couple of states that have their own examรขโฌโand require much more than 625 hours. I donรขโฌโขt see that those states will want to back up and adopt this. READ MOREรขโฌยฆ