Description
Prof. Richard Liao, L.Ac. presents herbal medicine and other solutions to safety issues associated with acupuncture, cupping, moxa, and gua sha. Learn how to handle situations such as patient needle fear, allergies to metal needles, panic attacks, fainting, and seizures. A case history section covers pneumothorax, excessive bleeding, burns due to moxa, edema due to cupping, reactions to electroacupuncture and blisters due to gua sha. The focus of the course is using herbal solutions for accidents in the clinic. Download the course, take the online quiz and receive a certificate of completion to fulfill your acupuncture continuing education requirements.
To view sample course material click the following: Acupuncture CEUs Online >
Purchase the course and it will be downloaded to your computer in PDF format. PDFs work on Apple Mac, Windows PC, iPad, iPhone, Android and other platforms. After reviewing the course, take the online quiz and a certificate of completion will be automatically generated for INSTANT credit. You may re-take the quiz as often as is needed and there is no time limit.
Continuing Education Credits
Fulfills the special NCCAOM Safety PDA category requirement, Provider #602.
4 Safety NCCAOM Diplomate PDAs (safety category)
4 California Acupuncture Board CEUs (category 1)
4 Texas CAEs (3 general, 1 ethics)
4 Florida Board of Acupuncture CEs (2 medical errors, 2 general)
4 CTCMA British Columbia acupuncture CEs
4 BCNA & CNPBC (British Columbia Naturopathic Assoc.) credits
4 CAAA Alberta CEUs
4 CTCMPAO (Ontario, Canada) continuing education credits
4 OAQ CEUs (Board of Acupuncturists of Quebec)
4 NZASA (2 Ethics, 2 Chinese Medicine) CPDs (New Zealand Acupuncture Standards Authority)
4 Acupuncture NZ (NZRA) New Zealand CEUs
4 NS-CMAAC Nova Scotia acupuncture CEUs
4 CMBA CPDs/CEUs (Chinese Medicine Board of Australia)
4 IVAS CEs (International Veterinary Acupuncture Society)
4 California Board of Registered Nursing contact hours
(Massachusetts: applicable towards the acupuncture & herbs requirements)
Yvette Guzman –
Excellent
Quan Liang –
very good course.
David Scott Thompson –
It was fine. I had hoped for more in-depth info but overall it was fine.
Cynthia Chin –
good basic review
Jan SteGermaine –
ok – effective review, case histories were instructive yet entertaining, the modification of the herbal formulas was also instructive and very entertaining since many chief herbs and deputy herbs were completely dropped making the original quite modified – enjoyable learning experience. Thank you. Jan
Sunanda Harrell-Stokes –
Useful information which is well organized & helpful in practice
Lourdes Martinez –
Easy to follow and good refresher information.
Lorraine Wilcox –
Needed the CEUs so it did the trick, but it was kind of thin.
Larry Moore –
Fun case studies
Duane Stephens –
Straight to the point.