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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Komadina
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
03/09/07
HB
SHORT TITLE Legal Protection of Health Care Therapies
SB SM 48
ANALYST Hanika Ortiz
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07
FY08
FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$.1 see
narrative
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Memorial 48 requests a study to assess whether the public’s right to access traditional,
cultural, complementary and alternative health care therapies and remedies freely is adequately
protected by law.
The memorial provides for the following:
•
New Mexico has a long history of cultural healers, including the curandera, sobadora,
partera, medica and arbolaira, and healing traditions, including plant medicines and
foods, prayer, ceremony and song, and these traditions must be shared with the current
generation and preserved by future Generations.
•
In New Mexico, there are also well-accepted complementary and alternative health care
therapies that have historically been practiced by persons who are not licensed or
regulated by the state, including naturopathy, homeopathy, meditation, mind-body
healing practices, traditional eastern practices such as qi gong and ayurveda, nutrition and
lifestyle change, energy therapies, aromatherapy, folk remedies, anthroposophy, herbal
therapy and healing practices using heat, cold, water, light and sound.
•
A large number of New Mexicans are using complementary and alternative health care
therapies, food, food supplements, herbs and herbal remedies.
•
New Mexico is home to a large population of indigenous, traditional, alternative and
complementary healers and health care practitioners and many internationally recognized
educational institutions.
pg_0002
Senate Memorial 48 – Page
2
•
The legislature enacted the Sunrise Act with the intent that no profession or occupation
should be subject to regulation unless such regulation was necessary to protect the health,
safety or welfare of the public from clear harm.
•
It is in the best interests of the state and its citizens, and consistent with the Sunrise Act,
that New Mexico avoid unnecessary regulation when there is no clear risk of harm or
endangerment to the public and that the public continue to enjoy the freedom to access
traditional, cultural, complementary and alternative health care therapies, traditional plant
medicines, folk remedies and herbs without restraint.
•
Licensed practitioners providing traditional, cultural, complementary and alternative
health care therapies can be disciplined by their licensing boards because these therapies
might be deemed to be outside the accepted standard of care.
•
New Mexicans have had the freedom to buy and sell supplements and other health-
promoting substances without regulation, and this right should be preserved.
•
Legislative recognition of the value of traditional, cultural, complementary and
alternative health care therapies will benefit the citizens of New Mexico by allowing
practitioners to practice openly and promote the availability of their services, supporting
those patients who wish to access alternative services and allowing patients to discuss
openly their use of these therapies with all their health care providers in order to achieve
coordination of care.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The study group will incur costs to State agencies dependent upon how many staff members
participate; how often the group meets; and, any additional costs derived from the
implementation of any recommendations made by the group.
If members of the study group receive no other compensation, perquisite or allowance, they may
be entitled to per diem and mileage as provided in the Per Diem and Mileage Act.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
The regulation and licensing department, the office of attorney general, representatives from
each of the state boards that license health care providers, including the New Mexico medical
board, the board of nursing, the board of pharmacy and representatives from the health care-
related boards within regulation and licensing, are being requested to collaborate on a study that
will assess whether current law adequately protects the public's right to access safe and effective
traditional, cultural, complementary and alternative health care remedies and whether any
changes to state law are necessary to protect this right.
The memorial further resolves that the study group seek to be as inclusive as possible and
encourage public input from a variety of perspectives and modalities and hold at least two public
meetings in different geographic locations of the state.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
The study group will be required to report any legislative recommendations to the appropriate
interim legislative committees by October 31, 2008.
AHO/csd