ATCMA Hpoa
Ministry of Health Statement on Traditional Chinese Medicine Regulation
Following sustained advocacy from the TCM community, the Ministry of Health has indicated it will clarify restrictions around prescribing Chinese herbal formulas. Final assessment will depend on the specific language adopted in the amended Regulations and Bylaws.
Root, Branch, and the Future of Our Profession: A TCM Lens on Advocacy
Change can feel unsettling, especially when it affects the heart of how we practice. In this blog, ATCMA looks at today’s regulatory challenges through the lens of Traditional Chinese Medicine, using familiar principles like root and branch, interconnected systems, adaptability, and patience to explain how we’re advocating for the profession. From scope of practice and public safety to the long-term future of TCM in British Columbia, this piece offers insight into why this work matters and how thoughtful, sustained advocacy helps ensure our medicine continues to grow and thrive.
How Advocacy Works: Why Some of Our Work Happens Behind the Scenes
Advocacy is rarely as simple--or as fast--as any of us would like. As a professional association, ATCMA understands the frustration many in our community feel when change is happening around us and information seems limited. We want to take this opportunity to explain how advocacy work actually unfolds, why some conversations cannot be shared publicly in real time, and how ATCMA has been working consistently and strategically on behalf of the profession.
Defending Safe Herbal Practice: ATCMA Board Members Join Protest Against Regulatory Changes
ATCMA board members, Charity Cheng and Dr. Virginia Ding, attended a rally today to protest the BC government's removal of the restricted activity of prescribing, compounding, and dispensing Chinese herbal formulas, currently set to come into action on April 1, 2026.
Act Now To Protect Public Safety and Professional Standards
With the implementation of the new Health Professions and Occupations Act (HPOA) and our new Regulations, forthcoming changes will remove the restricted activity of prescribing Chinese herbal formulas beginning April 1, 2026. The consequence? An opening for unregulated individuals to prescribe, compound, and sell Chinese herbal medicine without oversight, training, or professional accountability.
Removing this vital protection is not just a bureaucratic change — it’s a fundamental threat to public safety and the integrity of our profession. Take action!
3 Ways to Act to Regain Our Restricted Activity of Prescribing Chinese Herbs
The prescribing of Chinese herbal formulas requires specialized education, clinical judgment, and regulatory oversight. ATCMA is sharing these options for practitioners and public to support the reinstatement of prescribing, compounding, and dispensing of Chinese herbal medicine as a restricted activity in British Columbia.
How to Connect with Your MLA About the Impacts of the HPOA on the TCM Profession
British Columbia’s health-regulation landscape is undergoing a historic shift. With the new HPOA, the Complementary Health Professions Regulation, the CCHPBC Bylaws, and the new CCHPBC Professional Standards, the entire framework governing TCM and acupuncture practice is being re-written.
ATCMA has serious concerns about several impacts on Traditional Chinese Medicine. These issues affect not only practitioners, but also patient access, cultural continuity, and the integrity of TCM as a distinct profession.
This is a crucial moment for TCM professionals to engage. Read on to learn what you can do!