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Eliminating AT Licensure in North Carolina Concerns Parents

State Lawmakers are considering a measure that would eliminate more than a dozen licensing boards, including one for athletic trainers or AT’s.

Heidi Gessner doesn’t like the idea. She says her teenage daughter suffered a hip injury while playing lacrosse. She recovered with the help of an athletic trainer.
“She had to do constant physical rehab on her own. And that’s another way the trainer was so great,” Gessner said.

State lawmakers in the Oversight Occupational Licensing Subcommittee are reviewing the state’s Board of Athletic Trainer Examiners, which provides licenses to certified athletic trainers.

This means someone without the necessary educational background and training could coin themselves an athletic trainer.

Nina Walker, the head AT for the UNC-Chapel Hill men’s lacrosse team doesn’t like the subcommittee’s proposal.

“Athletic trainers treat patients in very vulnerable situations. They are concussed. They have heat illness,” Walker said. “They are in situations where they can’t advocate for themselves. I think parents need to know who the individual is that is taking care of their child when they are not there.”

Lawmakers in the subcommittee are considering eliminating 14 out of 55 state licensing boards.

Some of the occupational licenses on the chopping block include:

  • Electrologists and Laser Hair Practitioners

 

  • Pastoral Counselors

 

  • Interpreters and Transliterators

 

  • Irrigation Contractors

 

  • Recreational Therapists and Assistants

 

  • Acupuncturists
  • Athletic Trainers
  • Foresters
  • Podiatrists
  • Alarm Systems Business
  • Fire and Casualty Insurance Licenses and Life and health insurance licenses
  • Employee Assistance Professionals
  • Certified Clinical Perfusionists
  • Public Librarians

The state is considering reassigning some occupational licenses to existing boards

  • Opticians
  • Midwives
  • Respiratory Care Practitioners
  • Marriage and Family Therapists
  • Substance Abuse Therapists
  • Cape Fear River Pilots and Morehead City Harbor and Beaufort Bar Pilots licenses

Rep. Jonathan Jordan of Ashe and Watauga Counties, says the measure is to ensure the state is not over-regulating people out of jobs. Rep. Jordan also says the subcommittee will consider keeping board licenses that protect public health and safety.

For Gessner, that means keeping athletic trainers licensed in North Carolina.

“I would really ask them to think carefully about our kids and how it could impact them.”

The licenses are not funded by taxpayers. Lawmakers in the subcommittee are still reviewing this list.

A final draft will go before a full committee vote on April 5.

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University of North Carolina Staff and Students Take Home NCATA Awards

– Five UNC athletic trainers and two Carolina students were recently honored at the North Carolina Athletic Trainers’ Association’s (NCATA) annual meeting on March 4-5 as part of National Athletic Training Month.

Nina Walker, whose primary clinical responsibilities are with the Carolina men’s lacrosse and men’s and women’s cross country/distance teams, was named the College/University Athletic Trainer of the Year.  Walker also serves as a clinical instructor for the UNC graduate and undergraduate athletic training programs. She is the director of the undergraduate observer program and currently lectures on topics related to manual therapy, electronic medical records and biofeedback.

UNC’s Kim Chase ATC, Sally Mays ATC, Jake Mir ATC and Carly Natsis ATS were honored for their actions in saving the life of a spectator at a Carolina volleyball match last fall.  The medical staff successfully revived the spectator who was in cardiac arrest using CPR and AED.  Chase, Mays, Mir and Natsis were four of the 13 athletic trainers honored at the banquet for lifesaving accomplishments.

Johanna White, a senior at UNC, was presented with the Hall of Fame Scholarship for Academic Excellence, and Deema Al-Ghandour, a junior, receieved the Pioneer Scholarship for Service.

National Athletic Training Month is held every March in order to spread awareness about all that athletic trainers do. Athletic Trainers (ATs) are health care professionals who collaborate with physicians to provide preventative services, emergency care, clinical diagnosis, therapeutic intervention and rehabilitation of injuries and medical conditions.

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