- (a) “Acupressure” means a non-invasive treatment approach utilizing the same underlying diagnostic model as acupuncture but treating the appropriate points with pressure.
- (b) “Amma” means a system of body work therapy which employs a wide variety of massage techniques, manipulations and the application of pressure, friction, and touch to points and the channels on which they are located.
- (c) “Auriculotherapy” means ear acupuncture which applies the principles of acupuncture to specific points on the ear to treat illness, injury, or other health conditions and concerns.
- (d) “Channels” mean the pathways through which energy passes throughout the body.
- (e) “Craniosacral therapy” means a treatment approach using gentle massage pressure to rebalance the craniosacral system.
- (f) “Functional medicine” means a systems biology-based approach that focuses on identifying and treating the root cause illness, injury, or other health conditions.
- (g) “Gua sha” means a scraping technique used in oriental medical treatments to disperse stagnation in soft tissue.
- (h) “Integrative medicine” means an approach that applies multimodal interventions and uses conventional and complementary approaches in a coordinated manner to address a patient’s health concerns.
- (i) “Jin shin do” means a Japanese form of acupressure which is characterized by self-treatment.
- (j) “Jin shin jitsu” means a Japanese form of acupressure utilizing a combination of acupressure points called safety energy locks which are held for a minute or more in an effort to harmonize body, mind, and spirit.
- (k) “Pakua” means an oriental exercise system philosophically based on the Chinese trigrams.
- (l) “Points” mean specific places on the energy channels of the body, located anatomically or by sensitivity to pressure and characterized by lower electrical resistance than the surrounding tissue.
- (m) “Polarity therapy” means a holistic therapy that combines bodywork, dietary adjustments, and exercises to restore the balance of the body’s vital energy through correction of the electromagnetic field of the body.
- (n) “Qi gong” means an ancient Chinese exercise system that stimulates and balances the flow of vital energy in the channels by regulating posture, mind, and breath.
- (o) “Reiki” means a Japanese energy therapy that uses energy transmission to balance the biofield that surrounds the human body.
- (p) “Review of systems” means an inventory of the body systems that is obtained through a series of questions in order to identify signs or symptoms which the patient may be experiencing. This term also includes “general system review”.
- (q) “Shiatsu” means a Japanese acupressure technique which restores a balanced flow of energy within the channels of the body by application of rhythmic pressure on specific points using the fingers, hands, elbows, knees, and feet.
- (r) “Sotai” means a Japanese therapeutic exercise system devised by Keizo Hashimoto based on the perception that a distortion in a person’s center of gravity or polar axis leads to disorders and disease.
- (s) “T’ai chi” means a Chinese system of exercise consisting of slow, controlled, and fluid movements through a series of specific postures to circulate the vital energy of the body.
- (t) “Therapeutic touch” means an energetic therapy developed by Dolores Krieger, RN, that employs a laying-on-of-hands technique based on Asian theories of energy flow.
- (u) “Tuina” means a form of Asian bodywork that utilizes acupuncture point pressure as well as a variety of rubbing, circling and manipulation techniques to disperse blockages in or generate energy into various channels.
- (v) “Zero balancing” means a touch technique for aligning the body’s energy and musculoskeletal system developed by Fritz Smith, osteopath and acupuncturist.
Source. #7081, eff 8-26-99; ss by #7872, eff 4-14-03; ss by #10004, INTERIM, eff 9-22-11, EXPIRED: 3-20-12 New. #10158, eff 6-27-12; ss by #13516-A, eff 3-7-23