Chiropractic Licensure and Education
There are currently 16 chiropractic colleges in the United States, ten
of which were established prior to 1945. Over 14,000 young men and women
attend these chiropractic colleges each year.
Since 1974, standards for chiropractic education have been established
and monitored by the Council on Chiropractic Education (CCE), a nonprofit
organization located in Scottsdale, Arizona. Recognized by the U.S. Department
of Education as the specialized accrediting agency for chiropractic education,
the CCE sets the standards for the curriculum, faculty and staff, facilities,
patient care and research.
Admissions requirements of chiropractic colleges are influenced by CCE
standards and chiropractic licensing board requirements. A minimum of
two years of undergraduate education is required, with successful completion
of courses in biology, general chemistry, organic chemistry, physics,
psychology, English/communication and the humanities. Each required science
course must also include a laboratory unit.
Sixty credits or more must be completed prior to admission to a chiropractic
college. Two colleges currently require 75 units, and one college requires
90 units. Currently, six state licensing boards require a bachelorŐs degree
in addition to the doctor of chiropractic degree for licensure, and that
number is continually on the rise.
A chiropractic program consists of four academic years of professional
education averaging a total of 4,822 hours of course work. Several areas
of study are emphasized during the course of chiropractic education:
1) adjustive techniques/spinal analysis
2) principles/practices of chiropractic
3) physiologic therapeutics
4) biomechanics
The practice of chiropractic is licensed and regulated in all 50 states
in the U.S. and in over 30 countries worldwide. State licensing boards
regulate, among other factors, the education, experience and moral character
of candidates for licensure, and protect the public health, safety and
welfare.
The National Board of Chiropractic Examiners (NBCE) was established in
1963 and functions quite similarly to the National Board of Medical Examiners.
The NBCE maintains consistency and fairness among the state licensing
boards. The NBCE also administers the national board examination necessary
to practice as a chiropractor. This exam is divided into several specific
sections:
Part I covers the basic sciences and may be taken after the first year
of chiropractic college education
Part II covers clinical sciences and is administered when students are
in their senior year of chiropractic college
Part III is a written clinical competency examination that requires
a student to have passed parts I and II and be within eight months of
graduation (or already graduated).
For more information please visit:
Chiropractic Training
Licensure and Legal Scope of Practice
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