Council on Naturopathic Medical Education
Accrediting naturopathic doctoral programs in
the U.S. and Canada
Public Comment Notice
Proposed Changes to CNME Standards to Allow for Clinical Training in the Context of Private Practice Settings
At its meeting on October 30 – 31, 2025, the Board of Directors of the Council on Naturopathic Medical Education (“CNME”) approved several proposed revisions and additions to CNME accreditation standards and definitions of terminology as follows:
- A revision of Standard VI (“Program of Study”), Part C (“Clinical Education Component”), that would allow for student-interns to complete a portion of their required clinical training in private practitioner offices, including the treatment of patients (currently, students are only allowed to get credit for observation in private practitioner offices);
- A revision of the definition of the term “residential” and an added definition for the term “clinical supervisor” to be consistent with the above proposed revision to the clinical education standard.
- Another revision to Standard VI, Part C, that would allow for use of “peer-assisted learning,” along with the addition of a new terminology definition.
The comment period runs from December 1, 2025, until January 31, 2026. Please use the form on this page to submit comments.
To submit comments by mail, send them to:
Council on Naturopathic Medical Education
PO Box 178
Great Barrington, MA 01230
See our Naturopathic Program Accreditation page for information on CNME’s accreditation standards, policies, procedures, and the CNME Handbook of Accreditation, which can be downloaded as a PDF.
If you have any questions, please contact Daniel Seitz by telephone at 413-528-8877 or by email at [email protected]. Thank you for your comments.
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Our Mission
Our mission is quality assurance. The Council on Naturopathic Medical Education serves the public by accrediting doctoral programs in naturopathic medicine in the U.S. and Canada that meet or exceed our educational standards.
Purpose of Accreditation
The Council’s voluntary, in-depth accreditation process promotes high-quality naturopathic education and training, and safe and effective practice. Our educational standards provide the basis for licensing/regulating naturopathic doctors in the U.S. and Canada. CNME is recognized by the U.S. Department of Education to accredit doctoral programs in naturopathic medicine.
All CNME-accredited naturopathic doctor schools/programs (ND programs) are primarily campus-based and typically take four years to complete; CNME does not accredit programs that are delivered primarily or entirely online.
Naturopathic Medicine: An Overview
Blending modern scientific knowledge with traditional and natural forms of medicine.
Naturopathic Education
ND programs educate students in a range of natural modalities as well as in biomedical and clinical sciences, and complete two years of clinical training.
Naturopathic Accreditation
Accreditation process promotes high-quality naturopathic education and training, and safe and effective practice.
CNME-Accredited Programs
Graduates of CNME-accredited programs are qualified for licensure in Canada and the U.S.
Photo courtesy of Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine
Naturopathic physicians look beyond surface symptoms to determine the underlying causes of illness and provide natural approaches for restoring health.
