New Profession, Same Old Mistakes? A Researcher's Thoughts with Dr. Steffany Moonaz
Are there lessons we can take from other professions?
What is the IAYT doing well? What can they improve upon?
When will I get a vacation?
These are all questions we cover in our chat with Dr. Steffany Moonaz.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
*This point cannot be stressed enough when talking about license within the yoga therapy space. Just because you have a license **Does not** mean you can necessarily bill insurance. Let’s uncouple those thoughts, please. Thanks.
*We can learn a lot from the journey of other professions. We deep dove into acupuncture with Dr. Moonaz and it is fascinating to hear the stories of professions where there are restrictions about who they can treat, how they can treat, and who supervises the practitioners. What are your thoughts here?
*Where the IAYT seems to missed the mark is in understanding how people in yoga therapy find their clients through the referral process. I have said this before, but the amount of LHCPs (licensed health care providers) who have said “I will just get a 200 hour teacher training cert and do what you do, is staggering. Now I still get referrals from those folks because eventually they realize that isn’t the case–but the fact that I have to explain this to an organization in our industry is wild to me. That just isn’t how it works for any of us on the ground, taking clients as yoga therapists.
*Gravitas and money. Those are the things we want.
*Steffany said something I really want to emphasize. We can, as a profession, take the steps needed to become a licensed profession–and then decide not to do it. But in my opinion, it is WELL WORTH taking the steps to professionalize as a whole. It benefits us as an industry in the long run.
*We need to give the IAYT credit where credit is due. The steps taken thus far in the area of self-regulation are significant. The accreditation process, the credentialing process, continuing education requirements, core competencies, these are all important in the development of yoga therapy as a profession. No doubt about it.
*How do we distinguish the difference in all of the different services in the yoga marketplace? This is a huge question, especially in the context of yoga therapy. What ideas do YOU have? Email me, rebecca@workinginyoga.com and let me know.
*This is the time where I remind you that the International Association of Yoga Therapists has no legal requirement to advocate for us as professionals. Their designation is a 501c3, which is a public serving organization. Just as a note.
*Just to update you, We still have no official stance from the IAYT as to weather or not the Q designation is stopped completely, now a month later after we recorded. Just in case you need to know.
RESOURCES