Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 9, September, 2024
Section
1
Authority and Purpose
1.
Authority - The following
Rules for Massage Therapy in Arkansas are duly adopted and promulgated by the
Arkansas Board of Health pursuant to the authority expressly conferred by the
laws of the State of Arkansas including, without limitation, the Massage
Therapy Act, specifically Ark. Code Ann. §
17-86-203(a).
2.
Purpose - These Rules are
prepared for the purpose of establishing standards to regulate the vocation of
massage therapy, to provide for the licensing of persons to carry on and to
teach such vocation, to regulate the conduct and sanitation of massage therapy
clinics, Massage Therapy schools, and Massage Therapy postsecondary schools so
as to prevent the spreading of communicable diseases and, to provide penalties
for violation thereof.
Section
2
Principles, Methods and
Definitions
Terms found in Arkansas Code §
17-86-102
are descriptive rather than limiting, and massage therapy includes those
techniques which are utilized in all phases of massage and bodywork for the
purposes of relaxation, stress reduction, pain relief, injury prevention,
injury repair, postural improvement and/or health enhancement.
1.
"Apprenticeship" means a
program that meets the federal guidelines set out in 29 C.F.R. Part 29, as
existing on March 1, 2021, and approved by the United States Office of
Apprenticeship as meeting the requirements of an apprenticeship.
2.
"Assist" means acting as an
aide to a master massage therapist or massage therapy instructor.
3.
"Automatic licensure" means
granting the occupational licensure without an individual having met
occupational licensure requirements provided under the Arkansas Code or by
other provisions in these Rules.
4.
"Board" means the Arkansas State Board of Health.
5.
"Continuing Education" means
education that is acquired after an individual has graduated and become
licensed as a massage therapist.
6.
"Cupping Therapy for massage" means a modality used to release
rigid soft tissues, through the application of a non-heated device that creates
suction to lift the tissue away from the body.
7.
"Department" means the
Arkansas Department of Health.
8.
"Direct supervision" means being in the physical presence of a
licensed master massage therapist or massage therapy instructor.
9.
"Guest Instructor" means a
qualified speaker or presenter.
10.
"Licensee" means an individual licensed under the Massage Therapy
Act and these Rules.
11.
(a)
"Massage therapist" means a
person who has:
(1) Earned a diploma from a
Board-accepted school of massage therapy;
(2) Passed an examination required or
accepted by the Board; and
(3)
Become licensed and registered to practice massage therapy.
(b)
"Massage
therapist" includes a person who has previously obtained the massage
therapist license under prior state law.
(c) A massage therapist may:
(1) Instruct continuing education programs
approved by the Department of Health; and
(2) Assist in the instruction of the
procedures listed in the definition of Massage Therapy under the direct
supervision of a massage therapy instructor or master massage
therapist.
12.
(a)
"Massage therapy" means the treatment of soft tissues, which may
include skin, fascia, and muscles and their dysfunctions for therapeutic
purposes of establishing and maintaining good physical condition, comfort, and
relief of pain.
(b) "Massage
therapy" is a health care service that includes gliding, kneading, percussion,
compression, vibration, friction, nerve strokes, and stretching the
tissue.
(c) "Massage therapy" also
means to engage in the practice of any of the following procedures:
(1) Massage therapy techniques and procedures
either hands-on or with mechanical devices;
(2) Therapeutic application and use of oils,
herbal or chemical preparations, lubricants, nonprescription creams, lotions,
scrubs, powders, and other spa services;
(3) Therapeutic application of hot or cold
packs;
(4) Hydrotherapy techniques,
which means the use of water in any form for therapeutic purposes and includes
methods of full and partial immersion baths, whirlpools, sponging, sprays, body
shampoos, body scrubs, body wraps, fomentations, compresses, poultices, packs,
masks, steam treatments, and sauna treatments;
(5) Heliotherapy, which may include
mechanical devices, heat lamps, and other devices with the use of light for
therapeutic purposes and may consist of the use of infrared radiation lamps and
devices and the various uses of other light that might be approved by the
Department;
(6) Electrotherapy,
which means the use of electrical devices for therapeutic purposes and may
consist of the use of mechanical vibrators, electric stimulation, direct and
alternating currents, interferential currents, micro currents, and Russian
stimulation; and,
(7) Any hands-on
bodywork techniques and procedures rising to the level of the techniques and
procedures intended to be regulated under the Massage Therapy Act and not
covered under specific licensing laws of other boards.
(d) The following are not included in the
scope of massage therapy practice:
(1) Colonic
irrigation and other methods of internal hydrotherapy;
(2) Depilation, waxing, extractions, and
electrolysis;
(3) Practices
involving the use of ultrasound, unless the therapist can present educational
qualifications acceptable to the Department and a licensed physician prescribes
the treatment; or,
(4) Piercing,
lancing, or penetrating the skin.
13.
"Massage Therapy Act" means
Arkansas Code §
17-86-101,
et. seq.
14.
"Massage therapy
clinic" means a clinic, place, premises, building, or part of a building
in which a branch or any combination of branches of massage therapy or the
occupation of a massage therapist is practiced;
15.
(a)
"Massage therapy instructor" means a person who:
(1) Before July 1, 2010, has completed no
less than two hundred fifty (250) hours of practical experience as a master
massage therapist, which may be gained, in part or in whole, as an assistant to
an instructor in a massage school or may be gained, in part or in whole, as a
directed instructor in a massage school and has completed no less than two
hundred fifty (250) continuing education hours as approved by the
Department;
(2) On or after July 1,
2010, has been an active and practicing licensee and registered as a master
massage therapist for a period of not less than three (3) years preceding the
application for an upgrade to massage therapy instructor;
(3) On or after July 1, 2010, in addition to
the experience under subdivision (15)(a)(1) of this section, has completed no
less than two hundred fifty (250) continuing education hours as approved by the
Department as a licensed master massage therapist; and
(4) Is determined by the Department to be
qualified to be licensed and registered to practice massage therapy.
(b) Massage therapy instructor
includes a person who has previously obtained the massage therapy instructor
license under prior state law.
(c)
Massage therapy instructors may:
(1) Instruct
continuing education programs approved by the Department;
(2) Instruct any of the procedures in
subdivision (12) of this section; and
(3) Instruct basic curricula in a massage
therapy school registered by the department as required by §
17-86-306(e).
16.
"Massage
Therapy School" means a registered and licensed facility that meets and
follows the required educational standards as established by § 1786- 306
and all pertinent rules established by the State Board of Health.
17.
"Massage Therapy Spa" means
a site or premises, or portion of a site or premises, in which a massage
therapist practices massage;
18.
(a)
"Master massage therapist"
means a person who:
(1) Before July 1, 2010,
is a licensed and registered massage therapist who has completed no fewer than
two hundred fifty (250) hours of practical experience as a massage therapist,
which may be gained in part or in whole as an assistant to an instructor in a
massage school and has completed no less than one hundred twenty-five (125)
continuing education hours as approved by the Department of Health;
(2) On or after July 1, 2010, has been an
active and practicing licensee and registered as a massage therapist for a
period of not less than two (2) years preceding the application for an upgrade
to master massage therapist;
(3) On
or after July 1, 2010, in addition to the experience under subdivision
18.(a)(1) of this section, has completed no less than one hundred twenty-five
(125) continuing education hours as approved by the Department of Health; and
(4) Is determined by the
Department of Health to be qualified to be licensed and registered to practice
massage therapy.
(b)
"Master massage therapist" includes a person who has previously obtained the
master massage therapist license under a prior state law.
(c) Master massage therapists may:
(1) Instruct continuing education programs
approved by the Department of Health;
(2) Instruct any of the procedures listed in
the definition of massage therapy in this section; and
(3) Instruct, as directed by a massage
therapy instructor, basic curricula in a massage therapy school registered by
the Department of Health as required by §
17-86-306(e).
19.
"NCBTMB" means National Certification Board of Therapeutic Massage
and Bodywork.
20.
"Owner" means an individual who is a sole proprietor, member,
shareholder, or holder of an ownership interest, directly or indirectly, in a
partnership, association, joint venture, corporation, limited liability
company, or trust that owns or controls a massage therapy school or
postsecondary massage therapy school.
21.
"Passing grade" means a
score of seventy (70%) percent or better.
22.
"Postsecondary massage therapy
school" means a massage therapy school that:
(a) Offers a postsecondary curriculum
approved by the State Board of Health; and
(b) Has an enrollment in which no more than
fifty percent (50%) of its students do not have a diploma or the recognized
equivalent of a high school diploma.
23.
"Sexual misconduct"
includes:
(a) A range of behavior used to
obtain sexual gratification against another's will, at the expense of another,
without the client's knowledge, engaging in sexual activity for profit, or a
combination of any of these activities;
(b) Massage of the genitalia, anus, and,
except under specific circumstances, the breast; and
(c) Sexual activity with consent of a client
or at the request of a client.
24.
"Uniformed service member"
means an active or reserve component member of the United States Air Force,
United States Army, United States Coast Guard, United States Marine Corps,
United States Navy, United States Space Force, or National Guard; an active
component member of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Commissioned Officer Corps; or an active or reserve component member of the
United States Commissioned Corps of the Public Health Service.
25.
"Uniformed service veteran"
means a former member of the United States uniformed services discharged under
conditions other than dishonorable.
Section 3
Policies &
Procedures
1. The
Department designates all forms and letters as necessary.
2. The Massage Therapy Technical Advisory
Committee (MTTAC) may meet on a quarterly basis and at other times as deemed
necessary by the Department and follows all requirements of the Freedom of
Information Act and all other applicable State laws in conducting such
meetings.
(a) The MTTAC shall consist of seven
(7) members, who shall be appointed by the Board for a term of three (3) years.
The composition of the MTTAC shall be as follows:
(1) Six (6) shall be licensees under the
Massage Therapy Act;
(2) Only one
(1) shall be an owner of a massage therapy school; and
(3) One (1) member, to represent the public,
shall not be engaged in or retired from the practice of massage
therapy.
(b) The powers
and duties of the MTTAC are as follows:
(1)
Recommend rule changes to the Board;
(2) Recommend CEU approval to the Department;
and,
(3) Hold initial hearings and
determinations as described in Section 4, Rule 4.
3. Requests for items to be placed
on the MTTAC's agenda must be submitted to the Department of Health's Massage
Therapy Section in writing at least fourteen (14) days prior to the applicable
MTTAC meeting.
4. A copy of the
Massage Therapy Act and a copy of the latest adopted Rules shall be posted on
the Department of Health's website and available for download.
5. An applicant applying as a new massage
therapy licensee, an individual applying for a new massage therapy school
license, or a licensee applying for an upgrade issued by the Department shall
apply to the Identification Bureau of the Arkansas State Police for a state and
federal criminal background check to be conducted by the Identification Bureau
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
(a)
The state and federal criminal background check shall conform to applicable
federal standards and shall include the taking of fingerprints;
(b) The applicant shall sign a release of
information to the Department and shall be responsible for the payment of any
fees associated with the state and federal criminal background check;
(c) Each applicant who has resided outside of
Arkansas shall provide a state and federal criminal background check, including
the taking of fingerprints, issued by the state or states in which the
applicant resided; and,
(d) Results
shall be sent directly to the Department from the agency performing the state
and federal criminal background check.
6. The MTTAC may deny, suspend, place on
probation, or revoke a license if a licensee or applicant has pleaded guilty or
nolo contendere to or been found guilty of any felony listed under Ark. Code
Ann. §
17-3-102.
7.
Pre-Licensure Criminal Background Check
(a) Pursuant to Act 990 of 2019, an
individual may petition for a prelicensure determination of whether the
individual's criminal record will disqualify the individual from licensure and
whether a waiver may be obtained.
(b) The individual must obtain the
pre-licensure criminal background check petition form from the
Department.
(c) The Department will
respond with a decision in writing to a completed petition within a reasonable
time.
(d) The Departments response
will state the reasons for the decision.
(e) All decisions of the Department in
response to the petition will be determined by the information provided by the
individual.
(f) Any and all
decisions made by the Department in response to a prelicensure criminal
background check petition are not subject to appeal.
(g) The Department will keep and maintain a
copy of the petition and response, which will be reviewed during the formal
application process.
8.
Waiver Request:(a) If an
individual has been convicted of a felony listed in A.C.A. § 17-3102, the
Department may waive disqualification of a potential applicant or revocation of
a license based on the conviction if a request for a waiver is made by:
(1) An affected applicant for a license;
or
(2) An individual holding a
license subject to revocation.
(b) The Department may grant a waiver upon
consideration of the following, without limitation:
(1) The age at which the offense was
committed;
(2) The circumstances
surrounding the offense;
(3) The
length of time since the offense was committed;
(4) Subsequent work history since the offense
was committed;
(5) Employment
references since the offense was committed;
(6) Character references since the offense
was committed;
(7) Relevance of the
offense to the occupational license; and
(8) Other evidence demonstrating that
licensure of the applicant does not pose a threat to the health and safety of
the public.
(c) A
request for a waiver, if made by an applicant, must be in writing and accompany
the completed application and fees. A request for waiver, if made by a
licensee, must be in writing.
(d)
The Department will respond with a decision in writing and will state the
reasons for the decision.
(e)
Appeals under this section will be subject to the Administrative Procedures Act
§
25-15-201, et
seq.
9. Applicants for
licensure are considered who have completed and graduated with a minimum of
five (500) in-classroom hours of massage therapy classes, or proof is given of
completion of the specific classes and hours taken as required in Arkansas
massage schools.
(a) Each course must be a
passing grade of seventy-five (75) percent of higher.
10.
Fee Waiver under Act 725 of
2021(a) Pursuant to Act 725 of 2021,
an applicant may receive a waiver of the initial licensure fee, if eligible.
Eligible applicants are applicants who:
(1)
Are receiving assistance through the Arkansas, or current state of residence
equivalent, Medicaid Program, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
(SNAP), the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and
Children (SSNP), the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program (TEA), or
the Lifeline Assistance Program (LAP);
(2) Were approved for unemployment within the
last twelve (12) months; or
(3)
Have an income that does not exceed two hundred percent (200%) of the federal
poverty income guidelines.
(b) Applicants shall provide documentation
showing their receipt of benefits from the appropriate State Agency.
(1) For Medicaid, SNAP, SSNP, TEA, or LAP,
documentation from the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS), or current
state of residence equivalent agency;
(2) For unemployment benefits approval in the
last twelve (12) months, the Arkansas Department of Workforce Services, or
current state of residence equivalent agency; or
(3) For proof of income, copies of all United
States Internal Revenue Service Forms indicating applicant's total personal
income for the most recent tax year e.g., "W2," "1099," etc.
(c) Applicants shall attest that
the documentation provided under (b) is a true and correct copy and fraudulent
or fraudulently obtained documentation shall be grounds for denial or
revocation of license.
11.
Licensure for Massage Therapist
through Apprenticeship under the Earn and Learn Act of 2021
(a) An applicant for licensure for Massage
Therapist under this Rule shall provide satisfactory proof of completion of
apprenticeship via official documentation from the apprenticeship program. This
documentation may be in the form of a certificate, diploma, or similar official
credential, or letter on official program letterhead.
(b) An applicant for licensure under this
Rule shall provide satisfactory documentation that the completed apprenticeship
program meets the federal guidelines set out in 29 C.F.R. Part 29, as existing
on March 1, 2021, and that the program has been approved by the United States
Office of Apprenticeship or the Arkansas Department of Workforce
Services.
(c) An applicant for
licensure under this Rule shall meet all the other non-educational requirements
for licensure under these Rules, including Section 5.2 and Section 7.
(d) If an applicant is denied a license for
failing to meet the criteria in (a)-(c), the applicant shall be provided the
reason for denial in writing.
Section 4
Enforcement
1.
Consumer Information:
(a) A copy of the most recent inspection
sheet shall be posted in a conspicuous area.
(b) All Massage Therapy schools, Massage
Therapy postsecondary schools, Massage therapist licenses, Master massage
therapist license and Massage instructor licenses and spa and clinic
registration letter shall be conspicuously posted in a designated place in
reception areas, outside individual work rooms, or in the clinic
area.
(c) A copy of the online
complaint website and phone number for the Arkansas Department of Health
Cosmetology and Massage Therapy Section shall be posted in a designated place
in reception area, outside individual work rooms, or in the clinic
area.
2.
Inspections:(a) Initial, routine and
complaint inspections are conducted to ensure compliance with the licensing law
and rules. Any inspector shall have the authority to enter into and inspect any
massage therapy spa, clinic or school at any time during business hours.
Massage Therapy spas or clinics are inspected at least annually but not limited
to, to ensure compliance with the licensing law and rules promulgated by the
Board unless complaints are received by the Department. The inspectors examine
licenses; inspect buildings and equipment; report violations of the law or
rules; investigate complaints; - and perform initial inspections of new spas,
clinics and schools.
3.
Complaints:(a) Any person may
file a complaint against any of the following: a person who practices massage
therapy, massage therapy clinic/spa, massage therapy school or postsecondary
massage therapy school on any of the grounds for disciplinary action provided
in §
17-86-311(a)
of the Massage Therapy Act.
(b)
Official complaints must be made in writing within ninety (90) days from the
date of infraction.
(c) Complaints
will be investigated by the Department and its staff.
(d) The Department has the authority to
investigate all such written complaints, investigate and refer to the MTTAC any
information that comes to their attention constituting reasonable belief that a
violation of law or rule has occurred.
4.
Hearings
(a) If findings are made against a licensee,
clinic/spa, or massage therapy school or postsecondary massage therapy school,
a hearing shall be held by the MTTAC.
(1) The
MTTAC will hold any necessary hearings at the regular quarterly
meetings.
(2) Appeals of MTTAC
findings may be heard by the State Board of Health.
(b) For the purpose of adjudicative hearings
on complaints, the Department shall comply with the Arkansas Administrative
Procedures Act, §
25-15-201 et.
seq.
Section
5
Licensing and Renewals
1. The Department may administer an
examination of its own preparation as the State licensing examination for
Arkansas massage therapists, to be administered at the time and place the
Department so designates.
2. The
Department will accept any of the following, in lieu of the State licensing
examination, provided that the applicant passes a Department examination that
verifies their knowledge of the Massage Therapy Act and of these rules that
govern the practice of massage therapy in the State:
(a) Federation of State Massage Therapy Board
Massage and Bodywork Licensing Exam (MBLEx);
(b) National Certification Examination for
Therapeutic Massage (NCETM); or,
(c) National Certification Examination for
Therapeutic Massage & Bodywork (NCETMB).
3. In the instance of multiple exams, the
Department reserves the right to approve additional exams that are equivalent
to those listed in Section 5, number 2.
4. The Department may, at its discretion,
require a practical examination and may publish guidelines for the examination
so that applicants might have insight into what would be expected to be
demonstrated.
5. Every massage
therapy license, active or inactive, is valid for a period of two (2) years and
expires on the licensee's birthday.
(a) The
licensee must submit the following for renewal of his or her license: a
completed license renewal application, payment of the appropriate fees and
documented proof of no fewer than eighteen (18) hours of continuing education
that have been approved in accordance with Section 7.
(b) A renewal application must be postmarked
on or before the first day of the month preceding the month in which the
licensee's birthday falls in the biennial renewal year.
Example: Joe's birthday is June 14th and his license
expires in 2011. His renewal application must be postmarked on or before May 1,
2011.
(c) A
renewal application postmarked after the first day of the month preceding the
month in which the licensee's birthday falls shall be charged a late fee of
twenty-five dollars ($25.00) in addition to renewal fees.
(d) A license is expired if application is
postmarked after the birthday of the licensee in the biennial renewal year.
(1) Before the Department issues a new
license to an applicant with an expired license, the applicant shall:
(A) Submit a new application that requires
the applicant to meet current requirements; and
(B) Successfully complete an examination
recognized by the Department of Health.
6. Renewal application forms will
be mailed out the first of the month preceding the month they are
due.
7. Any individual licensee who
is currently not practicing and wishes to place his or her license on the
inactive list shall:
(a) Submit a renewal
application for inactive status every two (2) years, even if remaining
inactive;
(b) Surrender his or her
current license to the Department of Health office;
(c) Not practice massage therapy during the
time licensee is on the inactive list; and,
(d) Not remain on the inactive list for a
period to exceed four (4) years without reexamination.
(e) An individual who has been placed on the
inactive list for fewer than four (4) years and wishes to reactivate licensure
shall follow the procedures for license renewal, present satisfactory evidence
of completion of continuing education hours for the inactive period and pay all
appropriate fees before resuming active practice of massage therapy.
(f) An individual who passes the four (4)
year time allotment shall be considered to have an expired license and must
meet the current requirements for licensure and successfully complete an
examination recognized by the Department before resuming active practice of
massage therapy.
8.
Persons practicing with an expired license may be referred for prosecution or
civil action for practicing without a license and penalties of Arkansas Code
§
17-86-103
may be applied.
Section
6
Reciprocity, Temporary Licensure and Military
Licensure.
1.
Reciprocity under Act 1011 of 2019.
(a) Required Qualifications for Reciprocity.
An applicant applying for reciprocal licensure shall meet the following
requirements:
(1) The applicant shall hold a
substantially similar license in another United States jurisdiction.
(A) A license from another state is
substantially similar to an Arkansas Massage Therapy license if the other
state's licensure qualifications require:
1.
Completed and graduated with a minimum of five (500) in- classroom hours of
massage therapy classes, or proof is given of completion of the specific
classes and hours taken as required in Arkansas massage schools as required by
Ark. Code Ann. §
17-86-306(e).
(B) The applicant shall hold his
or her occupational licensure in good standing.
(2) The applicant shall not have had a
license revoked for:
(A) An act of bad faith;
or
(B) A violation of law, rule, or
ethics;
(3) The
applicant shall not hold a suspended or probationary license in a United States
jurisdiction;
(4) The applicant
shall be sufficiently competent in the Massage Therapy and pass a licensing
exam comparable to Section 5, Rule 2(a)-(c) and pass the Arkansas Massage
Therapy Law examination.
(b) Required documentation. An applicant
shall submit a fully-executed application, the required fee, and the
documentation described below.
(1) As evidence
that the applicant's license from another jurisdiction is substantially similar
to Arkansas, the applicant shall submit the following information:
(A) Evidence of current and active licensure
in that state. The Department may verify this information online if the
jurisdiction that issue provides primary source verification on its website
and;
(B) Evidence that the other
state's licensure requirements match those listed in Section 6, Rule 1(a)(1)(A)
The Department may verify this information online if the jurisdiction that
issue provides primary source verification on its website.
(2) To demonstrate that the applicant meets
the requirements in Section 6, Rule 1(a)(2)-(4), the applicant shall provide
the Department with:
(A) The names of all
states in which the applicant is currently licensed or has been previously
licensed;
(B) Letters of good
standing or other information from each state in which the applicant is
currently or has ever been licensed showing that the applicant has not had his
license revoked for the reasons listed in Section 6, Rule 1(a)(2) and does not
hold a license on suspended or probationary status as described in Section 6,
Rule 1(a)(3) The Department may verify this information online if the
jurisdiction that issue provides primary source verification on its
website.
(3) As evidence
that the applicant is sufficiently competent in the field of Massage Therapy,
an applicant shall:
(A) Pass a licensing exam
comparable to Section 5, Rule 2(a)-(c) and pass the Arkansas Massage Therapy
Law examination.
(B) Submit three
(3) letters of recommendation from former employers. former educators, or
clients.
(4) Documents
required to show compliance with least restrictive Requirements:
(A) A valid photo identification or driver's
license, or both; and
(B) A social
security card issued in the same name as the applicant or licensee.
(C) Present a high school diploma,
Certificate of General Educational Development, or college transcript and
credentials issued by a department-accepted massage therapy school or a like
institution with no less than five hundred (500) in-classroom hours of
instruction.
(D) An applicant shall
have the massage therapy school submit the transcript directly to the
department office.
1. If the applicant's
transcript is not obtainable from the original school, the applicant shall
submit a statement to explain why it may not be obtained.
2. Other documentation of credentials may be
submitted and accepted for licensure at
(E) Furnish to the department satisfactory
proof of passing an examination recognized and approved by the
department;
(5)
(A) An out-of-state applicant holding a
current massage therapy license issued by another state and after receiving an
Arkansas massage therapy license may apply for an upgrade to master massage
therapist or massage therapy instructor by providing appropriate continuing
education credits and experience gained before Arkansas licensure for
department approval.
(B) An upgrade
request shall be made by submitting a complete application package and paying
the fees required by this chapter.
2.
Temporary License
(a) The Department shall issue a temporary
license immediately upon receipt of the application, the required fee, and the
documentation required under Section 6, Rule 2(b) and (c).
(b) The temporary license shall be effective
for 90 days, unless the Department determines that the applicant does not meet
the requirements in Reciprocity sections Section 6, Rule 1(b)(1)-(4) in which
case the temporary license shall be immediately revoked.
(c) An applicant may provide the rest of the
documentation required above in order to receive a license, or the applicant
may only provide the information necessary for the issuance of a temporary
license.
3.
License for person from state that doesn't license profession pursuant to
Act 1011 of 2019.(a) Required
Qualifications. An applicant from a state that does not license Massage Therapy
shall meet the following requirements:
(1) The
applicant shall be sufficiently competent in Massage Therapy;
(2) Pass a licensing exam comparable to
Section 5, A, B or C and pass the Arkansas Massage Therapy Law examination;
and,
(3) Submit three (3) letters
of recommendation from former employers. former educators, or
clients.
(b) Required
documentation. An applicant shall submit a fully-executed application, the
required fee, and the documentation described below.
(1) As evidence that the applicant is
sufficiently competent in the field of Massage Therapy an applicant shall:
(A) Pass a licensing exam comparable to
Section 5, Rule 2(a)-(c) and pass the Arkansas Massage Therapy Law examination;
and,
(B) Submit three (3) letters
of recommendation from former employers. former educators, or
clients.
(2) A valid
photo identification or driver's license, or both.
(3) A social security card issued in the same
name as the applicant or licensee.
(4) Present a high school diploma,
Certificate of General Educational Development, or college transcript and
credentials issued by a department- accepted massage therapy school or a like
institution with no less than five hundred (500) in-classroom hours of
instruction.
(5) An applicant shall
have the massage therapy school submit the transcript directly to the
department office.
(A) If the applicant's
transcript is not obtainable from the original school, the applicant shall
submit a statement to explain why it may not be obtained.
(B) Other documentation of credentials may be
submitted and accepted for licensure at
(6) Furnish to the department satisfactory
proof of passing an examination recognized and approved by the
department.
4.
Reciprocity and state-specific
education pursuant to Act 1011 of 2019.
(a) The Department shall require an applicant
to take no less than five hundred (500) in-classroom hours of instruction
department-accepted massage therapy school or a like institution if the
applicant is licensed in another state that does not offer reciprocity to
Arkansas residents that is similar to reciprocity provided to out-of-state
applicants in A.C.A. §
17-1-108.
(b) Reciprocity in another state will be
considered similar to reciprocity under A.C.A. §
17-1-108
if the reciprocity provisions in the other state:
(1) Provides the least restrictive path to
licensure for Arkansas applicants;
(2) Do not require Arkansas applicants to
participate in the apprenticeship, education, or training required as a
prerequisite to licensure of a new professional in that state, except that the
state may require Arkansas applicants to participate in continuing education or
training that is required for all professionals in that state to maintain the
licensure; and,
(3) Do not require
Arkansas applicants to take a state-specific education unless required to do so
under the same conditions described in A.C.A. §
17-1-108.
5.
Occupational
Licensing of Uniform Service Members, Veterans and Spouses under Act 135 of
2021
(a) This Rule applies to a:
(1) uniformed service member stationed in the
State of Arkansas;
(2) uniformed
service veteran who resides in or establishes residency in the State of
Arkansas; or,
(3) the spouse of
Section 6, Rule 5(a)(1) or (2) including a:
(A) uniformed service member who is assigned
a tour of duty that excludes the spouse from accompanying the uniformed service
member and the spouse relocates to Arkansas; or,
(B) uniformed service member who is killed or
succumbs to his or her injuries or illness in the line of duty if the spouse
establishes residency in Arkansas.
(b) Automatic licensure shall be granted to
persons listed in Section 6, Rule 5(a) if:
(1)
The person is a holder in good standing of occupational licensure with similar
scope of practice issued by another state, territory, or district of the United
States; and,
(2) The person pays
the licensure fee in Section 5.
(c) Credit toward initial licensure -
Relevant and applicable uniformed service education, training, or
service-issued credential shall be accepted toward initial licensure for a
uniformed service member or a uniformed service veteran who makes an
application within one (1) year of his or her discharge from uniformed
service
(d) Expiration Dates - A
license expiration date shall be extended for a deployed uniformed service
member or spouse for one hundred eighty (180) days following the date of the
uniformed service member's return from deployment.
(e) Continuing Education - A uniformed
service member or spouse shall be exempt from continuing education requirements
in Section 7 for one hundred eighty (180) days following the date of the
uniformed service member's return from deployment.
(f) Any uniformed service member or spouse
exercising the exemption shall provide evidence of completion of continuing
education evidence of before renewal or grant of a subsequent
license.
Section
7
Continuing Education
1. All courses for continuing education must
fall within the scope of practice of massage therapy. Courses, demonstrations
and workshops offered within the State of Arkansas must be submitted to the
Department for prior approval for continuing education credits unless approved
by NCBTMB, AMTA, or ABMP.
2. For
the purpose of renewing or upgrading a license, credits may be approved for
courses that are:
(a) Pre-approved by the
Department; or
(b) Officially
transcribed courses from a U.S. Department of Education approved and accredited
postsecondary institution completed with a passing grade in anatomy,
physiology, kinesiology, biomechanics, pathology, medical terminology or other
related courses within the scope of practice of massage therapy; orc. Out of
state continuing education courses that fall within the scope of practice of
massage therapy that are approved by NCBTMB, AMTA, or ABMP.
(c) Courses falling outside above guidelines
may be submitted for consideration.
3. Home study and online courses may be
approved by the Department providing all the following criteria are met:
(a) The course is pre-approved by the
Department, NCBTMB, AMTA, or ABMP. The course must fall within the scope of
practice of massage therapy.
(b)
The course content cannot be in a hands-on subject matter.
(c) The course or courses cannot comprise
more than six (6) of the total eighteen (18) continuing education hours needed
for biannual renewal and cannot be repeated for renewal or upgrade purposes.
(1) During a statewide state of disaster
emergency related to public health, as declared by the Governor in accordance
with Ark. Code Ann. §
12-75-107,
the MTTAC may, upon motion and vote, temporarily suspend the requirement that
no more than six (6) of the total eighteen (18) continuing education hours
needed for biannual renewal be home study or online courses until such time
that MTTAC determines the suspension be terminated or the statewide state of
emergency has terminated or ended in accordance with Ark. Code Ann. §
12-75-107.
4.
(a) Each course requesting Department
approval must present all required information on the forms prescribed by the
Department with appropriate fees.
(b) Courses must be relevant to the field of
massage therapy as defined in Section 2 of these rules;
(c) Courses must have the following:
(1) Proposed title;
(2) Schedule of course;
(3) Learning outcomes;
(4) Session description;
(5) Relevance of course;
(6) Program content/time frame;
(7) Teaching strategies; and,
(8) Learning environment.
(d) Courses must be instructed by
a person who meets one of the following:
(1)
Has completed specialized related training:
(A) For every one hour of CE to be taught the
instructor must have 5 hours of specialized related training.
(B) The Department may give credit for
extensive experience teaching the course, related courses, or years employed in
the field.
(2) Has
obtained instructor credentials specific to the practice.
(3) Has discovered and/or developed massage
techniques and has a minimum of two (2) years practical experience related to
the subject.
(4) Meets at least two
(2) of the following criteria:
(A) Holds a
current Arkansas massage therapist license;
(B) Graduated from a massage therapy school
or postsecondary massage therapy school approved by the Department or a school
with a comparable curriculum;
(C)
Holds a minimum of a bachelor's degree with a major in a subject related to the
content of the program offered; or,
(D) Presents to the Department evidence of a
substantial amount of education, training, and knowledge sufficient, in the
discretion of the Department, to qualify their expertise in the
field.
5. Pre-approved continuing education
providers must comply with the following rules:
(a) retain an attendance record of
participants with copies of course materials for at least three (3) years
following the conclusion of the course;
(b) furnish each participant with a
certificate of attendance or transcript verifying the participant's successful
program completion;
(1) The certificate shall
not be issued until completion of the course.
(2) The certificate must contain the
participant's name, instructor's name and signature, title of the course, dates
the course was given, Department approval number, and number of credit hours
earned.
(c) submit
course revisions to the Department for approval:
(1) Course Revisions are defined as changes
to the following:
(A) Proposed
title;
(B) Schedule of
course;
(C) Learning
outcomes;
(D) Relevance of
course;
(E) Program content/time
frame;
(F) Teaching strategies;
and,
(G) Learning
environment.
(2) Course
revisions affecting less than ten (10) percent of the currently approved
content may be approved by the Department.
(3) Course revisions exceeding ten (10)
percent of the currently approved content may be approved by the Massage
Therapy Technical Advisory Committee.
(d) One (1) hour of continuing education
credit is defined as no less than fifty (50) minutes of uninterrupted
in-classroom learning, practical demonstration, or practice of the technique in
the presence of the instructor.
(e)
Presenters/moderators/instructors of courses may not receive credit for the
courses they present.
(f) The
Department retains the right to review programs given by the provider; and may
rescind provider status or reject individual programs given by provider if the
provider has:
(1) Disseminated any false or
misleading information in connection with the continuing education program;
or
(2) Failed to conform to and
comply with the written agreement and rules of the Department;
(3) Failed to meet ethical standards;
or
(4) Is not providing consistent
quality educational benefits to participants.
(g) A written notice to rescind approval for
continuing education courses will be sent to the course approval applicant and
any person(s) approved to instruct the course.
(1) Instructors may request hearing of a
decision to rescind approval for continuing education course(s).
(2) The hearing shall be conducted according
to Section 4 of these rules and the Arkansas Administrative Procedures Act,
§ 25-15201, et seq.
6. Officially transcribed courses from a U.S.
Department of Education approved and accredited postsecondary institution
completed with a passing grade may be accepted at the rate of three (3)
college-credit hours to equal forty (40) clock-hours of education.
7. For the purpose of upgrading a license,
classes that repeat any of the applicant's specific entry-level five hundred
(500) hour coursework will not be accepted.
8. For the purpose of upgrading a license,
duplicated continuing education courses do not apply toward required hours for
the upgrade.
9. The Department
shall audit five to ten percent of randomly-selected, active license renewals,
for compliance with continuing education requirements annually.
(a) Licensees who receive an audit form shall
submit all appropriate documentation to substantiate compliance with the
Department's continuing education requirements within thirty days of
receipt.
(b) Each licensed massage
therapist shall maintain records of continuing education for a period of (3)
years from the date of attendance.
Section 8
Massage
Clinics
1. With the
exception of treatments that are given at the location of a client, or
treatments given at a temporary location lasting not more than 14 days such as
a trade show, sporting event or community festival Massage therapist clinics,
spas, or other facilities must: have an adequate workspace:
(a) The work area must be well ventilated,
clean, and well equipped.
(b) There
must be a sink for hand-washing with hot and cold running water and soap must
be accessible.
(c) Sanitize all
body surface area(s) that come into contact with a client, prior to such
contact, with a disinfecting solution that is bactericidal, capable of
destroying bacteria; virucidal, capable of destroying viruses; and fungicidal,
capable of destroying fungi. Disinfectants must be used according to
manufacture labels to be safe and effective. Contact time listed on the
manufacturers label must be adhered to at all times to effectively destroy
pathogens.
(d) Have accessible
restrooms that are clean and sanitary without offensive odors and in working
order at all times.
(e) Keep
furniture, equipment, electrical equipment and other fixtures clean and in good
repair at all times.
(f) Launder
linens after each use.
(g) Have a
separate receptacle for soiled and clean linens.
(h) Keep clean linens stored out of public
use areas including but not limited to restrooms, reception area, hallways and
other public traffic areas.
(i)
Keep oils, lotions, or any other products that are used on clients in
containers that are labeled and closed.
(j) Be compliant with all applicable city,
state and local statutes and regulations.
(k) In-home massage clinics/offices must be
located in a separate room or rooms, used only for massage therapy services
during ordinary business operations.
(l) There must be no bed in a room used for
massage therapy services.
(m) A
school or clinic must be equipped with a massage table or tables, a massage
chair or chairs and equipped with such standard equipment dictated by the
practice of massage therapy.
2. In-home massage clinics/offices must be
located in a separate room or rooms, used only for massage therapy services
during business operations.
3.
Mobile clinics are not considered temporary.
4. Anyone who has an infectious, contagious,
or communicable disease which may be spread by airborne, droplet, contact, or
indirect methods and who is in contact with the public must not practice until
all risk of disease transmission is cleared. Any employee with such a disease
must be immediately relieved from duty until all risk of disease transmission
is cleared.
Section 9
Massage Therapy Schools and Postsecondary Massage Therapy
Schools
General Requirements: School as used throughout this Section
includes, unless otherwise indicated, both Massage Therapy Schools and
Postsecondary Massage Therapy Schools.
1.
Application for Massage Therapy
School:
(a) Any person, firm or
corporation seeking to open a school of Massage Therapy shall submit an
application with required forms to the Massage Therapy Section office and
receive pre-approval from the Department.
(b) The application shall include:
(1) Completed application provided by the
Department and available on the Department's website at
http://www.healthyarkansas.com;
(2) Describe the location of your school,
type of structure, and furnish a detailed floor plan in compliance with Section
9, Rule 4;
(3) List of proposed
equipment used for instructional purposes in compliance with Section 9, Rule
4;
(4) Submit proposed curriculum
including name and addition of textbooks and any other material that will uses
for instructional purposes;
(5)
List of instructors and their qualifications;
(6) Submit samples of all forms to be used in
the School, such as, contract, sign-in sheets, attendance records, transcripts,
guest instructor log, etc.;
(7)
Submit a copy of your school's handbook- including refund policy. Postsecondary
Schools must also include a disciplinary policy;
(8) Valid background checks for each
owner;
(9) The required
non-refundable registration fee ($850.00).
(c) A person shall not establish, operate, or
maintains a massage therapy school without first having obtained a certificate
of massage therapy school licensure issued by the Department.
(d) Any Massage Therapy School wishing to
teach both secondary and postsecondary students shall obtain both a license for
a Massage Therapy School and a Postsecondary Massage Therapy School. The School
shall also provide a procedure by which it will ensure that only students with
a high school diploma or the equivalent are enrolled in the postsecondary
school and receive Title IV funds.
(e) After satisfactory completion of initial
requirements, schools are required to undergo Department inspection before they
can be licensed.
(1) A Department staff member
will perform an inspection of the school premises with required forms
completed, and the results of such inspection will be returned to the
Department for approval and/or adjustment recommendations.
(2) Facilities that do not pass the first
inspection will be re-inspected within thirty (30) days of notification of
corrections.
(f)
Postsecondary Massage Therapy Schools must show proof that the school adopts
and discloses to the students a complaint process substantially similar to the
one outlined in Section Four of these Rules.
2.
Purchase of an existing Massage
Therapy School:(a) Any person, firm or
corporation seeking to purchase an existing Massage Therapy School or
Postsecondary Massage Therapy School shall submit an application with required
documents to the Massage Therapy Section office at least thirty (30) days prior
to purchase for pre-approval from the Department. Each application shall
include:
(1) An application to reflect the
change of ownership;
(2) Valid
background checks for each new owner;
(3) Copy of the legal change of ownership
document;
(4) Copy of each new
owner's government issued photo identification;
(5) A signed and notarized statement from
each owner selling their interest in the Massage Therapy School or
Postsecondary Massage Therapy School transferring the Massage Therapy School or
Postsecondary Massage Therapy School license to the new owner(s);
(6) A statement by new owner(s) reflecting
any changes that will be made in any of the following:
(A) The location of the Massage Therapy
School or Postsecondary Massage Therapy School, type of structure, or the
detailed floor plan, in compliance with Section 9, Rule 4;
(B) List of proposed equipment used for
instructional purposes, in compliance with Section 9, Rule 4;
(C) Curriculum including name and addition of
textbooks and any other material that will be used for instructional
purposes;
(D) List of instructors
and their qualifications;
(E) Any
forms to be used in the Massage Therapy School or Postsecondary Massage Therapy
School, such as, contract, sign-in sheets, attendance records, transcripts,
guest instructor log, etc.; and,
(F) The Massage Therapy School or
Postsecondary Massage Therapy School's handbook- including refund policy.
Postsecondary Massage Therapy Schools must also include a disciplinary
policy.
(7) The required
non-refundable registration fee ($100.00)
(b) After satisfactory completion of
requirements for transfer, the Massage Therapy School or Postsecondary Massage
Therapy School shall subject to Department inspection before the transfer of
ownership can be approved.
(1) A Department
staff member will perform an inspection of the Massage Therapy School or
Postsecondary Massage Therapy School premises with required forms completed,
and the results of such inspection will be returned to the Department for
approval and/or adjustment recommendations.
(2) Facilities that do not pass the first
inspection will be re-inspected within thirty (30) days of notification of
corrections.
3.
Relocation of a Massage Therapy
School or Postsecondary Massage Therapy School:
(a) Any person, firm or corporation seeking
to relocate a Massage Therapy school or Postsecondary Massage Therapy School
shall submit an application with required forms to the Massage Therapy Section
office and receive pre-approval from the Department.
(b) The application shall include:
(1) Completed application provided by the
Department and available on the Department's website at
www.healthyarkansas.com.
(2) Describe the location of your school,
type of structure, and furnish a detailed floor plan in compliance with Section
9, Rule 4.
(3) List of proposed
equipment used for instructional purposes in compliance with Section 9, Rule
4.
(4) List of instructors and
their qualifications.
(5) Submit
samples of all forms to be used in the School, such as, contract, sign-in
sheets, attendance records, transcripts, guest instructor log, etc.
(6) Submit a copy of your school's handbook-
including refund policy. Postsecondary Schools must also include a disciplinary
policy.
(7) Valid background checks
for each owner.
(8) The required
non-refundable registration fee ($425.00)
(c) A person shall not relocate a massage
therapy school without first having obtained a certificate of massage therapy
school licensure issued by the Department.
(d) Any Massage Therapy School wishing to
teach both secondary and postsecondary students shall obtain both a license for
a Massage Therapy School and a Postsecondary Massage Therapy School. The School
shall also provide a procedure by which it will ensure that only students with
a high school diploma or the equivalent are enrolled in the postsecondary
school and receive Title IV funds.
(e) After satisfactory completion of initial
requirements, schools are required to undergo Department inspection before they
can be licensed.
(1) A Department staff member
will perform an inspection of the school premises with required forms
completed, and the results of such inspection will be returned to the
Department for approval and/or adjustment recommendations.
(2) Facilities that do not pass the first
inspection will be re-inspected within thirty (30) days of notification of
corrections.
(f)
Postsecondary Massage Therapy Schools must show proof that the school adopts
and discloses to the students a complaint process substantially similar to the
one outlined in Section Four of these Rules.
4.
Facility and Sanitary
Requirements(a) School facilities
must:
(1) Be kept clean, sanitary and in good
repair at all times.
(2) Clean
equipment and tools thoroughly on a routine basis and sanitize them with a
disinfecting solution that is bactericidal, capable of destroying bacteria;
virucidal, capable of destroying viruses; and fungicidal, capable of destroying
fungi. Disinfectants must be used according to manufacture labels to be safe
and effective. Contact time listed on the manufacturers label must be adhered
to at all times to effectively destroy pathogens. c. Have clinical workspace
allowing for unrestricted movement around massage tables.
(3) Have adequately ventilated workspace to
keep them free of excessive vapors, odors and fumes.
(4) Be heated and air-conditioned with
adjustable temperature control.
(5)
Have adequate space to accommodate all students during the theory and clinical
instructional hours for which they are enrolled.
(6) Have an instructional classroom that is
clean, in good repair and well ventilated.
(7) Have a minimum of one (1) massage table
for every three (3) students in class.
(8) Have an accessible hand-washing sink
supplied with hot and cold running water, a soap dispenser and a sanitary hand
drying method. Common towels are not allowed.
(9) Have accessible restrooms that are clean
and sanitary and in working order at all times. Restrooms shall not be used for
storage of products used for servicing clients.
(10) Have trash containers that are durable
and easily cleanable that do not leak. Trash containers must be emptied daily
to prevent an accumulation of garbage and the development of odors.
(11) Dispose of all one time use towels,
sheets and protective covering that cannot be disinfected immediately after
use.
(12) Have furniture, equipment
and other fixtures that are made of washable material and kept clean and in
good repair. Electrical equipment shall be kept clean and in good repair at all
times.
(13) Launder sheets and
towels to disinfect after each use on client.
(14) Have a separate receptacle for soiled
linens.
(15) Keep clean linens
separate from public and/or covered in public use areas.
(16) Keep oils, lotions or any products that
are used on the public in containers that are labeled and sanitary.
(17) Anyone who has an infectious,
contagious, or communicable disease which may be spread by airborne, droplet,
contact, or indirect methods and who is in contact with the public must not
practice until all risk of disease transmission is cleared. Any employee or
student with such a disease must be immediately relieved from duty until all
risk of disease transmission is cleared.
(b) Schools shall have an identifiable
Massage Therapy Instructor who provides oversight and supervision under which
other Master Massage Therapist or Massage Therapy Instructors can
teach.
(c) Schools must adhere to
all state and local ordinance and provide a copy of the fire inspection,
occupancy license, and/or business permits where required by law, and furnish
copies to the Department upon request.
(d) Schools must inform students regarding
emergency evacuation procedures and clearly mark or post all routes and
exits.
5.
Curriculum(a) Schools have the
discretion to grant CLEP credit for any previously obtained, successfully
passed, and officially documented classroom education relevant to massage
therapy.
(1) Such credit may be granted at the
rate of three (3) college credits to equal no more than forty (40)
clock-hours.
(2) Schools will
maintain a file copy of all such examinations for Department
inspection.
(b) Schools
must follow the curriculum outlined in Ark. Code Ann. §
17-86-306(e).
The curriculum must be presented to and approved by the Department and will
make further applications to the Department for any substantial modifications
in the subjects, contents, or instructional methods offered to the
students.
(c) Schools must provide
no less than three (3) clock-hours of HIV/AIDS and other basic communicable
disease education within their twenty-five (25) hours of hygiene and infectious
control as required by Arkansas Code § 17- 86-306 (e)(4).
(d) Schools that teach massage with students
wearing swimsuits or underwear must instruct students at some time during their
school on how to work on unclothed clients with a minimum of twenty (20) hours
of classroom or student clinic massages on unclothed clients, unless there is a
documented religious or medical objection made by the student.
(e) Schools may not include more than five
(5) percent of their total school curriculum of instruction with reiki,
polarity, or other energy-based modalities.
6.
Instruction Methods
(a) Each specified course of study must be
outlined with a syllabus that includes written learning objectives. Instructors
will follow daily lesson plans and will provide active, organized learning
sessions.
(b) Recognized methods of
instruction, such as, but not limited to, lecture, demonstration, and
supervised hands-on practice will be utilized to ensure reasonable learning
objectives and outcomes.
(c) All
classes must be instructed and supervised by qualified and approved personnel
and consist of no less than fifty (50) minutes of active teaching per credit
hour. In-school independent study time is limited to no more than five (5)
percent of the total hours of a program.
(d) Active teaching means qualified school
personnel offering organized lecture, activities, demonstration, and/or direct
and immediate supervision of students during hands-on practice.
(e) Written and practical evaluations shall
be conducted with all grades recorded and available for inspection.
7.
Instructor
Qualifications(a) All persons who
instruct any portion of a curriculum within an approved massage therapy school
must be a licensed master massage therapist or massage therapy instructor.
(1) Each school must have on file such
diplomas, transcripts, certifications, resumes, and/or other verifiable
documents that attest to the person's qualifications and technical
expertise.
(2) Each school must be
able to supply the Department with a list of instructors who have taught or who
will be teaching at that school along with documentation of their
qualifications and the subjects they have instructed or will
instruct.
(b) For the
purposes of qualifying instructors for subjects required by Arkansas Code
§
17-86-306,
the following definitions will be used:
(1)
Technical subjects are those defined as massage therapy techniques,
hydrotherapy, heliotherapy, electrotherapy, and any hands-on training that may
occur under various related subjects.
(2) Academic subjects include anatomy,
physiology, pathology, and related human sciences; and
(3) Non-technical subjects include massage
therapy laws, ethics, and business management.
(4) Persons to instruct technical subjects
must be qualified and hold a current license as a master massage therapist or
massage therapy instructor, and must have a minimum of two (2) consecutive
years of active experience in the practice of massage therapy.
(5) Persons to instruct academic subjects
must be qualified and hold a current license as a master massage therapist or
massage therapy instructor as defined in Arkansas Code §
17-86-102(6)(A)
or hold a minimum of a Bachelor's degree plus two (2) years practical
experience in a subjects directly related to that being taught.
(6) Persons to instruct non-technical
subjects must be qualified and hold a current license as a master massage
therapist or massage therapy instructor as defined in Arkansas Code§
17-86-102(6)(A)
or hold a minimum of a two (2) year associate's degree and two (2) years
practical experience in a subject directly relates to that being
taught.
(c) Schools may
invite guest instructors to teach within their program without Department
pre-approval if such guest instructor instructs on no more than sixteen (16)
hours per school curriculum. Section 9, Rule 7(a) and (b) show how guest
instructors shall be qualified.
(1) Schools
may utilize guest instructors to provide no more than a total of twenty-five
(25) hours per school curriculum. A Record of all hours of instruction provided
in this manner must be maintained by the school and be made available for
Department inspection upon request.
(2) Schools must keep a log of guest
instructors.
8.
Student Clinical
(a) The purpose of any student clinical is to
provide advancing students, enrolled in approved schools, an opportunity to
gain practical experience working with the public in a supervised
setting.
(b) The status of the
practitioner must be made clearly evident to the recipient of student
massage.
(c) Any student to be
considered eligible for clinical practice must have completed the following
requirements:
(1) one hundred (100) hours of
anatomy, physiology, pathology, and contraindications for massage therapy, and
one hundred (100) hours of technical training, and all portions of the school's
curriculum pertaining to personal hygiene, sanitation, ethics, and professional
standards; and,
(2) provide proof
of student liability insurance.
(d) All clinical massages by a student must
be documented and performed under the supervision of a qualified technical
instructor who has access to the treatment area at all times.
(e) No more than fifty (50) hours of student
massage may be attained in this manner and applied to meet the requirements for
licensure.
(f) Students may not
solicit payment in any form during clinical practice either on school premises,
at chosen locations for field trips, or while practicing away from school
facilities and direction.
(1) This includes
barters, donations and/or trades.
(2) The student may accept gratuities during
supervised clinical massage.
(g) No student may leave classroom
instruction to perform student-client massages.
9.
Records
(a) All student records must be maintained
for a period of not less than five (5) years.
(b) In the event of school closure or change
of school ownership a copy of all current student records and all student
records maintained for the previous five (5) years must be submitted to the
Department.
(c) Attendance records
will be maintained and verified by the school and must be made available for
inspection by the Department upon request. Such records must verify both the
subject and the actual attendance in class of each student enrolled.
(d) Schools must require and maintain proof
of CPR training for all students at the time of their graduation.
10.
Misc.
(a) Each school operated within the state
shall be inspected during regular operations by the Department at least one (1)
time each year.
(b) Any school
desiring to move the location of its license must notify the Department in
writing at least thirty (30) days prior to any location change. The Department
will inspect the school's new location within thirty (30) days of receiving a
relocation notice.
(c) Schools
providing off-site student massages shall be allowed only under the direct
supervision of a Massage Therapy Instructor or Master Massage
Therapist.
Section
10
Conduct & Ethics
1. It is the responsibility of the licensed
massage therapist (therapists) to create and maintain a safe environment during
a massage session.
2. It is the
therapist's responsibility to inform clients of their rights as recipients of
massage therapy including but not limited to the following:
(a) Their right to terminate the treatment at
any time; and,
(b) Their right to
modify the treatment at any time.
3. Therapists shall ensure and safeguard the
following rights of the clients:
(a) Obtain
necessary information from the client, to be held in confidence, regarding
pertinent health history in order to assure safe treatment at all
times;
(b) Stay within the scope of
practice of massage therapy, performing only techniques for which they are
appropriately and sufficiently trained; and
(c) Refrain, under all circumstances from
initiating or engaging in any sexual conversation, sexual conduct, sexual
behavior, or sexual activities involving a client, even if the client attempts
to sexualize the relationship.
4. The licensed massage therapist adheres to
the following practices:
(a) Keeping licensure
current;
(b) Conducts all aspects
of their massage practice in a legal, ethical, and responsible way;
and,
(c) Reports to the Department
in writing and under oath any knowledge of violations of the Massage Therapy
Act or the adopted Rules.
5. Violations of any provision under this
Section may result in disciplinary action by the Board of Health, up to and
including revocation of licensure in accordance with the procedures adopted in
Section 4 of these rules.
Section
11
Miscellaneous Guidelines
1. Massage Therapy must be provided in a way
that ensures the safety, comfort, and privacy of the client and
therapist.
2. Clients receiving a
massage must be draped or dressed to assure that the pubic area and genitals
are not exposed.
3. A licensee who
engages in the practice of massage therapy of the anus and genitalia shall have
his or her license revoked for a period of three (3) years. The licensee will
receive a hearing in accordance with the process outlined in Section 4 and the
Arkansas Administrative Procedures Act, Ark. Code Ann. §
25-15-201 et
seq.
4. The breast of a client may
be treated under the following circumstances:
(a) The massage of the breasts is for
therapeutic and medical purposes including, without limitation, the reduction
of scar tissue following a surgery on the breast, release of myofascial
binding, or improving lymphatic flow;
(b) The massage therapist has received at
least forty-eight (48) hours of continuing education credits in lymphatic
massage, myofascial massage, or oncology massage; and
(c) there is a valid request from the client,
the valid prescription is presented, or there is a referral from a qualified
medical professional.
(d) A
client's breast may not be exposed without first having obtained prior written,
signed consent.
(e) A written
description and explanation is given to the client before the massage begins
and permission granted again before uncovering the breast.
(f) Treatments must be noted on the client's
assessment form.
5. The
MTTAC shall revoke the license for a period of three (3) years of a licensee
who engages in the practice of massage therapy of the breast tissue without
following the process outlined in Paragraph 5 above.
6. Requirements for practicing cupping
therapy:
(a) The Massage Therapist must have a
minimum of six (6) hours in- class, specialized training in cupping therapy
which shall include indications, contraindications, hygiene, and hands on
techniques.
(b) When the six (6)
hours of specialized training is provided as part of the curriculum in a
massage therapy school or postsecondary massage therapy school, the transcript
shall indicate course hours in cupping therapy or a certificate of successful
completion shall be issued to the student.
CERTIFICATION
This will certify that the foregoing revisions to the Rules for
Massage Therapy in Arkansas were adopted by the State Board of Health of
Arkansas at a regular session of said Board held in Little Rock, Arkansas, on
the 28th day of October, 2021.