The Alaska Landmine recently published an opinion piece titled “Bills giving more power to naturopaths are a prescription for quackery” that conflates modern licensed naturopathic medicine with fringe wellness practices and makes several inaccurate or misleading claims about Naturopathic Doctors (ND), naturopathic medical education, regulation, and clinical practice.
Let’s use the author’s analogy of someone asking about a newly constructed bridge to actually make the analogy more accurate. Imagine you are about to drive your family across the author’s imaginary newly completed bridge. You ask the construction worker whether there was a project manager overseeing the entire build. Someone coordinating the engineering systems, stress loads, environmental conditions, maintenance planning, safety redundancies, and long-term structural integrity. “Oh no,” the worker replies. “The engineers were excellent at fixing visible cracks and isolated problems, but nobody was responsible for evaluating how the whole system functioned together.”
This analogy better reflects the growing divide in modern healthcare than the author perhaps realizes. Licensed NDs are not “alternative engineers” relying on mystical forces; they are medically educated healthcare professionals trained to evaluate the broader systems influencing human health — prevention, lifestyle, metabolic function, chronic disease drivers, and whole-person care — alongside modern diagnostics and evidence-informed medicine.
The article also makes a point to characterize licensed NDs as “anti-scientific,” suggesting they are equivalent to untrained alternative healers, implying that modernizing licensed NDs scope to include prescribing authority would endanger patients. These assertions ignore the statutory and educational framework governing licensed NDs in regulated jurisdictions across the United States and Canada.
First, licensed NDs are not unregulated wellness practitioners. In the 26 U.S. jurisdictions that license NDs, it is required they graduate from a four-year, in-residence doctoral program accredited by the Council on Naturopathic Medical Education (CNME) or its equivalent. They complete extensive biomedical and clinical training, and pass national board examinations (NPLEX). NDs complete an average of 4,100 didactic hours, including anatomy, physiology, pathology, pharmacology, diagnostics, and supervised clinical training. While naturopathic medical education is distinct from MD/DO education, it is inaccurate to portray it as devoid of medical science or equivalent to “witchcraft,” as the article suggests.
Second, the article attempts to discredit the entire profession by focusing heavily on homeopathy. Regardless of differing opinions about homeopathy, it is misleading to imply that homeopathy defines naturopathic medical practice or that all licensed NDs rely upon it as a primary therapeutic modality. Modern naturopathic practice in licensed states commonly includes evidence-informed nutrition, lifestyle medicine, preventive care, laboratory testing, physical medicine, and in many jurisdictions, pharmaceutical prescribing authority.
Many NDs do not utilize homeopathy at all, while others may incorporate it adjunctively, similar to how some conventional physicians incorporate complementary therapies such as acupuncture, meditation, or integrative medicine approaches. The author could not be more incorrect in asserting there is no evidence behind homeopathy. The American Institute of Homeopathy maintains one of the world’s most comprehensive lists of research studies on homeopathy and related topics. The list contains well over 6,000 research studies. Globally, more Medical Doctors prescribe homeopathy than other licensed providers.
Third, the article falsely frames prescribing authority bills as an attempt to “usurp” medicine from physicians. In reality, scope modernization proposals are regulatory frameworks designed to align statutory authority with existing education, examination, and clinical competencies. Prescriptive authority for licensed NDs in regulated jurisdictions is overseen by state boards and continuing education requirements. Numerous states, had the author bothered to research, allow NDs prescribing authority — many for decades without evidence of systemic public safety crises attributable to naturopathic prescribing. Furthermore, licensed naturopathic physicians are educated and trained to work collaboratively with conventional medicine physicians, often working as a health care team.
The article also suggests that NDs promote “pseudo-religious claims,” “magical energy fields,” and “crystal vibrations” as representative of the profession as a whole. This is a classic guilt-by-association argument. The existence of wellness-oriented services or spiritual programming offered by an individual clinic does not define the legal scope, educational standards, or regulatory structure of an entire licensed healthcare profession. By the same logic, the existence of non-standard practices among some chiropractors, nurses, psychologists, or even medical doctors would invalidate those professions entirely.
The article correctly notes that Alaska statute currently restricts naturopaths from using the term “physician.” However, it inaccurately implies that this terminology dispute somehow proves naturopathic doctors are unqualified or deceptive. Scope-of-practice terminology varies significantly by state statute and political history. In many licensed jurisdictions, NDs are legally recognized as naturopathic physicians under state law. The terminology itself does not determine the legitimacy of education, licensure, or regulation
Importantly, the article entirely omits a central public policy reality: Alaska faces significant healthcare access shortages, particularly in rural and underserved communities. Expanding access to licensed healthcare professionals — including NDs practicing within regulated scopes — does not replace MDs or DOs. It supplements an overstretched healthcare workforce and gives patients additional access points for preventive and primary care services.
Finally, the article relies heavily on inflammatory rhetoric rather than objective policy analysis. Terms such as “quackery,” “snake oil,” “woo woo,” and “witchcraft” may generate clicks, but they do not constitute evidence. Public policy debates regarding scope of practice should be grounded in verifiable facts: accredited education, licensure standards, examination requirements, disciplinary oversight, malpractice data, and patient outcomes — not caricatures or stereotypes.
Reasonable people may debate the appropriate scope of naturopathic medicine. But the assertion that licensed NDs are unscientific frauds masquerading as medical professionals is neither accurate nor constructive.
Linn Wheeling is the director of community engagement at the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians. She brings a wealth of experience in strategy development and organizational performance across technology, healthcare, and professional services.


-Linn Wheeling, Professional Naturopathy Advocate
MBA, Finance, Southern New Hampshire University 2017
BS, Journalism & Political Science, University of Idaho 1986
Wow, how not comforting!
So if they go to kook medical school (or just like getting stoned and shaking rattles a lot), we should all just pretend they’re doctors.
Alaska just dodged a bullet with this idiotic bill.
Here are the “medical” schools CNME currently accredits:
Totally not different from Stanford, Johns Hopkins, Harvard, and UPenn (Perelman).
Madness.
You’re a Nevada resident, stop commenting on here, for NO ONE cares about what you have to say.
Good stuff, Dan. Your thoughtful analysis is appreciated.
I’m a licensed Real Estate Broker. I think should be able to prescribe medications too. Probably ought to call my self a cardiologist too.
Cause you know, a license is a license right?
NP’s need to stay in their lane. Want a board or commission to regulate yourselves? Go for it. Just cut the crap about prescribing authority. It’s not what you are trained for.
This whole thing is absurd.
The acceptance rate at Bastyr and the national university of natural medicine is ~75%. The enrollment is ~85% women. These appear to be scam degree factories.
There is no scientific evidence supporting homeopathy as effective for treating any health condition: ask google….I just did.
~7% is the acceptance rate at actual medical schools….just saying
A 7% acceptance rate is not a good thing, it is a critical leg of the tripod that protects the medical monopoly.
I don’t know if naturpaths should have prescribing authority, but we have a huge problem with scarcity of medical care, and it is completely due to regulatory choices we have made.
“……… we have a huge problem with scarcity of medical care……….” That is not my experience at all. Indeed, for a population varying from 740K to 2.5 million, especially for the Anchorage/Mat-Su area, I’ve enjoyed plenty of outstanding medical care. Scheduling appointments with specialists can take more time now compared to a few years ago, but it’s not like it was 40-50 years ago. I don’t bother with naturopathy at all, so the issue isn’t an issue with me. If folks want to go to them, that’s fine with me. To each his own. I’m more than happy with my medical… Read more »
By your logic the fact that only 1-2% of College basketball players “make it” into the NBA is not a good thing. We need lower standards for medical and sport professionals? Because it is better to have more doctors-players than high quality doctors-players? Oy
“………By your logic the fact that only 1-2% of College basketball players “make it” into the NBA is not a good thing. We need lower standards for medical and sport professionals?……….”
Or a dozen NBA leagues, as if we need more sports garbage on TV……….
Reggie adds nothing to the conversation, per usual.
This comment of yours is packed with great stuff, Dan. Incredibly on topic. Of course, my point that the NBA monopoly (brought up by floridawoman) whizzed by your pointy head, but your comment on me was truly needed by the community. Thanks for your incredible contribution from the Nevada desert. You’ll be near triple digits tomorrow. I hope your air conditioning unit was maintained last winter.
Thanks for that huge contribution, Dan. Lots of information there to consider. Forget the thought of the NBA monopoly and the suppression of many thousands of poor, black basketball players who never make it professionally. Heck, that thought either whooshed by the top of your pointy head, or you got it and decided that it was too close to the AMA hold on power, so you needed to pull out your silly little sword and start swinging………….
Absolutely. The quality of NBA players is really high. There are tons of high quality players who cannot make a roster. If you value watching high quality basketball for an affordable price at a local arena, lowering the barriers to fielding a team is a first and necessary step.
Look, it’s not difficult to educate doctors and low quality care does not correlate to low intelligence of the MD. It correlates to doctors being unavailable or overworked.
The last time I went to a Lakers game at the Staples Center was about 10-12 years ago. For three people, the cost of the tickets (seats so high up there was no way you could even read the numbers on their jersey), dinner (burgers and brew), and parking was over $1500.
I’ll illustrate my point by listing the actual MD’s I personally have a relationship with. One was a solid doctor, but was incredibly frustrated by an inability to spend enough time with patients and retired before she turned 65. The smartest person I know got a PhD/MD and doesn’t really treat patients. Another brilliant friend got sick of the grind before he turned 50 and fucked off to New Zealand. The fourth and fifth people are both incorrigible drunks. The least intelligent doctor I know had a convoluted path into medical school that was made possible due to Peace Corps… Read more »
I’ll illustrate my point by listing the actual MD’s I personally have a relationship with. One was a solid doctor, but was incredibly frustrated by an inability to spend enough time with patients and retired before she turned 65. The smartest person I know got a PhD/MD and doesn’t really treat patients. Another brilliant friend got sick of the grind before he turned 50 and fucked off to New Zealand. The fourth and fifth people are both incorrigible drunks. The least intelligent doctor I know had a convoluted path into medical school that was made possible due to Peace Corps… Read more »
“We need MORE doctors. If we can’t get more doctors, I’ll settle for more naturopaths, I guess.”
-Dan
With an opinion like that, you plainly need more care from actual, board-certified medical doctors.
Lunacy.
Another fact-filled contribution from Nevada. Thanks for that, Dan. That’s some critical information.
Thank you for this article, Director Wheeling. It perfectly illustrates why the Landmine’s original article is so pressing and why naturopaths must be prohibited from meddling in serious medical affairs. “The article also suggests that NDs promote ‘pseudo-religious claims,’ ‘magical energy fields,’ and ‘crystal vibrations’ as representative of the profession as a whole. This is a classic guilt-by-association argument.” Naturopaths do widely promote these things (as anyone can see for themselves by looking at the social media and websites for naturopathic clinics, which Spenaardvark cited). That’s not “guilt by association,” that’s “guilt by explanation.” “The author could not be more… Read more »
An excellent comment, well said.
Great contribution, Dan! Thanks for that! You’re so informed!
Ummm, Doctor Nick Begich Jr. would like a word