309.363 Board approval of massage therapy program of instruction --
372 words·~2 min read·
/ky/309-363A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
Requirements -- Continuing education guidelines.
(1)A person, institution, or business entity offering a massage therapy program of
instruction shall file a completed application for a certificate of good standing with
the board on a form prescribed by the board and pay a fee as specified in KRS
309.357. The completed application shall provide proof acceptable to the board that
the following criteria have been met:
(a)The school is licensed to operate by the Kentucky Commission on Proprietary
Education, the Council on Postsecondary Education, or their equivalent in
another state;
(b)A curriculum statement showing clock hours devoted to each subject with the
following minimums:
1. One hundred twenty-five
(125)hours of anatomy, physiology, or
kinesiology;
2. A two hundred
(200)hour course to include massage theory, technique,
and practice focusing on gliding strokes, kneading, direct pressure, deep
friction, joint movement, superficial warming techniques, percussion,
compression, vibration, jostling, shaking, and rocking;
3. Two hundred
(200)hours of approach to the business of massage,
specifically including contraindications, benefits, business, history,
ethics, client documentation, legalities of massage, and modality courses
designed to meet the school's specific program objectives;
4. Forty
(40)hours of pathology; and
5. The school may use its discretion in allotting the additional thirty-five
(35)curricular hours that are required under KRS 309.358; and
(c)A listing of instructional staff and their qualifications as follows:
1. Instructors of the practical courses shall be licensed massage therapists
and shall have three
(3)years of experience in the practice of massage
therapy;
2. Instructors of science courses shall be either licensed massage therapists
with three
(3)years of experience in the practice of massage therapy or
have certification or specific higher education in the subject they are
teaching; and
3. Instructors in adjunctive courses shall have subject-specific education
and experience.
(2)A school may be presumed to have met the qualifications in subsection (1)(b) and
(c)of this section if it holds a current designation of "Approved School" from the
National Certification Board of Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork or has the
designation of "accredited" or "COMTA-endorsed curriculum" from the Council for
Massage Therapy Accreditation.
(3)The board shall accept National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and
Bodywork guidelines in approving continuing education.