A. Nothing in the Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine Practice Act is intended to limit, interfere with or prevent any other class of licensed health care professionals from practicing within the scope of their licenses, but they shall not hold themselves out to the public or any private group or business by using any title or description of services that includes the term acupuncture, acupuncturist or oriental medicine unless they are licensed under the Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine Practice Act. B. The Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine Practice Act shall not apply to or affect the following practices if the person does not hold himself out as a doctor of oriental medicine or as practicing acupuncture or oriental medicine: (1) the administering of gratuitous services in cases of emergency; (2) the domestic administering of family remedies; (3) the counseling about or the teaching and demonstration of breathing and exercise techniques; (4) the counseling or teaching about diet and nutrition; (5) the spiritual or lifestyle counseling of a person or spiritual group or the practice of the religious tenets of a church; (6) the providing of information about the general usage of herbal medicines, homeopathic medicines, vitamins, minerals, enzymes or glandular or nutritional supplements; or (7) the use of needles for diagnostic purposes and the use of needles for the administration of diagnostic or therapeutic substances by licensed health care professionals. History: 1978 Comp., § 61-14A-6, enacted by Laws 1993, ch. 158, § 14; 1997, ch. 240, § 5; 2000, ch. 53, § 3. Repeals and reenactments. — Laws 1993, ch. 158, § 14 repealed former 61-14A-6 NMSA 1978, as enacted by Laws 1981, ch. 62, § 6, creating the board and relating to officers and compensation, and enacted the above section, effective June 18, 1993. The 2000 amendment, effective May 17, 2000, in Subsection A, substituted "licenses," for "license as defined by each profession's New Mexico licensing statutes" and substituted "term acupuncture" for "terms acupuncture"; deleted former Subsection B allowing students to practice acupuncture and oriental medicine under supervision, and redesignated former Subsection C as present Subsection B; in present Subsection B, substituted "person" for "individual" in the introductory language, substituted "a person" for "any individual" and substituted "a church" for "any church" in Paragraph (5). The 1997 amendment, effective June 20, 1997, inserted "approved by the board" near the beginning of Subsection B, substituted "if" for "provided that" in Subsection C, and added Paragraph C(7).
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