New Chiropractic Licensure Examination Standards Offer Path to Reform
New testing standards empower state chiropractic boards to reclaim their regulatory role, protecting students and dismantling the cartel's grip on chiropractic education.
A Historic Move Toward Educational Freedom
In a major step forward for chiropractic education, a dedicated coalition of educators, practitioners, and policy experts has released landmark Standards for Recognition of Chiropractic Licensure Examinations. Building on the earlier successful release of the Standards for Recognition of Chiropractic Accrediting Agencies, this initiative signals a concerted effort to dismantle monopolistic control, particularly by entities like the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners (NBCE), and to restore transparency and accountability in licensure examinations.
CLICK HERE to review the Standards
“No private corporation should dictate who can enter the chiropractic profession. Licensure examinations must serve public interest, not corporate profits.”
— Christopher Kent DC, JD, MBA Workgroup Member
Why New Standards Were Necessary
For decades, the chiropractic profession has struggled under the control of a tight-knit trio: the Council on Chiropractic Education (CCE), NBCE, and the Federation of Chiropractic Licensing Boards (FCLB). This chiropractic cartel has dictated standards, examinations, and ultimately licensure eligibility, with little public oversight or transparency.
The recent NBCE job analysis, fraught with biases favoring certain chiropractic practices and philosophies, underscored the urgent need for reform. Critics argue that such biased analyses perpetuate outdated or narrow definitions of chiropractic competencies, marginalizing practitioners whose methods differ from the prevailing model.
Responding to the NBCE Part IV Centralization Outrage
These new standards come at a particularly critical moment, following widespread outrage within the chiropractic profession in response to the recent NBCE webinar that announced the centralization of the Part IV examination. The decision to consolidate testing at a single site in Greeley, Colorado, sparked significant concern and frustration, emphasizing the need for immediate reform. Critics have highlighted the financial, logistical, and accessibility issues created by this decision, reinforcing the demand for decentralized, fair, and transparent licensure examinations.
The Core of the New Examination Standards
The new Standards for Recognition of Chiropractic Licensure Exams directly address these biases. They mandate that:
Inclusivity in Job Analyses: Examination content must reflect comprehensive, regularly updated job analyses explicitly inclusive of chiropractic’s foundational principles, notably the detection, analysis, and correction of Vertebral Subluxation.
Organizational Independence: Examining bodies must operate independently from chiropractic trade or membership organizations to prevent conflicts of interest.
Psychometric Integrity: Exams must demonstrate robust psychometric soundness, including fairness, reliability, and validity across diverse chiropractic practice models.
Transparency and Accountability: Clear procedures for scoring, reporting, confidentiality, and complaint resolution must be upheld to ensure fairness and trust.
Federal Reforms Set the Stage
These chiropractic examination standards come amidst sweeping educational reforms initiated during the Trump administration, aimed at decentralizing federal control over accreditation and licensure. The recent passage of the "Big Beautiful Bill," which significantly restricts the flow of federal student loan money to institutions dependent on monopolistic accrediting and testing organizations, further undermines the cartel’s financial foundation and amplifies the importance of these new standards.
“The Trump-era reforms cracked the monopoly; these standards break it wide open. States now have the tools to ensure fairness and diversity in chiropractic practice.”
— Dr. Brian Moriarty, Florida Chiropractic Society
Implications for the Chiropractic Cartel
The implementation of these standards is expected to significantly diminish the cartel's influence by:
Eliminating Arbitrary Licensing Barriers: Removing dependence on the centralized NBCE Part IV exam and other redundant testing requirements.
Empowering State Regulatory Boards: Enabling states to independently evaluate and recognize alternative testing organizations and processes.
Reducing Student Debt: Curtailing unnecessary financial burdens created by monopolistic testing procedures.
“It’s time we ended this monopoly. Students deserve better, the public deserves better, and our profession deserves better.”
— Dr. Steve Tullius, Private Practitioner, Texas
State Boards: A Call to Action
The release of these standards places clear responsibility on state chiropractic regulatory boards. Boards are urged to adopt these standards promptly, evaluate testing agencies objectively, and assert their authority to set standards independently, free from cartel control.
“State boards have a duty—not a choice—to regulate the profession in the public interest. It's time to reclaim that responsibility.”
— Dr. Matthew McCoy, Foundation for Vertebral Subluxation
A Turning Point for Chiropractic
The new Standards for Recognition of Chiropractic Licensure Exams represent a historic turning point for chiropractic education and licensure. By adopting these standards, states will safeguard educational freedom, ensure equitable access to licensure, and protect the public from monopolistic practices that have stifled innovation and inflated costs.
The time for reform is now—state boards must act decisively to bring transparency, fairness, and accountability back into chiropractic licensure.
thanks Docs! Of course, places like MN run by the Tampon King will continue to follow the monotheism of centralization of power and socialist policies that enrich the politburo.
Thank you to all involved in this tremendous advancement.