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Published: Thursday, November 23, 2006 | 4:15 PM
ET
Canadian Press: Colin Perkel
TORONTO (CP) - Furious Chinese acupuncturists are
threatening to mobilize half-a-million people against Ontario's Liberal
government over legislation making their profession self-regulating.
The bill, which had final reading Thursday, entrenches "quackery" and puts the
public at risk, critics said. "Bill 50 discriminates against the Chinese
medicine profession and against the Chinese community and is a second head tax,"
said Stephen Liu, co-chairman of the Canadian Society of Chinese Medicine and
Acupuncture.
"We will fight to the last."
The reference to the hated tax once imposed on Chinese immigrants indicates the
depth of anger over the legislation among many of Ontario's 3,000 practitioners
of traditional Chinese medicine.
Critics say they find it offensive that the legislation allows other groups of
health professionals - such as physiotherapists, massage therapists or
chiropractors - to continue using acupuncture under standards set by their own
regulating bodies.
Liu said Chinese acupuncturists opposed to the legislation will call on their
patients, their families, friends, relatives and members of their churches -
500,000 people in all - to fight the Liberal party in next year's provincial
election.
Dr. Stanley Shyu, a Chinese-trained doctor of traditional medicine who has
practised in Canada for 32 years, said it's ludicrous to allow others to perform
acupuncture without rigorous training.
Doing so waters down a profession that can cure a wide range of ailments when
done by properly trained experts, but harms patients when done improperly, he
said.
"You don't let laymen stick needles in people and call it acupuncture," Shyu
said.
"That's called needling."
Health Minister George Smitherman, who introduced the bill almost a year ago,
acknowledged divisions over the legislation.
However, he said there was reason to stop other medical professionals from
performing acupuncture.
"Each of those colleges will be looking to work together in terms of making sure
that there is a consensus that the standard is consistent and appropriate,"
Smitherman said.
Proponents say the college that will regulate the profession when it's up and
running, likely in about two years, will set high standards, protect the public,
and enhance the overall credibility of the profession.
Quebec, Alberta and British Columbia along with close to 50 American states
already regulate Chinese medicine.
Critics also railed against the legislation because practitioners of traditional
Chinese medicine would no longer be able to prescribe and dispense herbal
formulas and compounds.
Naturopaths could get the exclusive right to do so, even though they might have
less training.
"Where is the fairness in this?" said Marylou Lombardi, president of the Ontario
Association of Acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
Opposition Leader John Tory said he supported the legislation because it at
least imposes a regulatory framework.
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