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Oklahoma HB 3239: How We Got Here — and Why Action Is Needed Now

When Oklahoma introduced HB 3239 earlier this session, it looked like a breakthrough moment for animal PEMF professionals.

The bill originally aimed to do something many states have struggled to do: create clarity. It offered a potential certification pathway for non-veterinary animal PEMF providers, one that would support accountability, protect animal owners, and reduce the “gray area” practitioners often face.

The idea: clarity through standards

From the start, the Association of PEMF Professionals (AOPP) supported the concept behind HB 3239 because it aligned with what the association has worked toward for years: professional standards, responsible training, and clear boundaries for PEMF services.

The certification pathway would have signaled a practical middle ground:

  • Not “anything goes”
  • Not “only veterinarians”
  • But a defined framework for qualified providers to operate responsibly

The turning point: the pathway language was removed

As HB 3239 moved through the committee process, the bill changed.

The PEMF certification pathway language was removed from the version currently advancing. That shift is the entire reason AOPP is sounding the alarm: the clearest solution in the bill, which made it meaningful to animal PEMF practitioners, has been removed.

Perspective

Without clear language that restores the pathway (or provides another explicit solution), Oklahoma risks landing right back where many states already are:

  • PEMF is treated as within the veterinary scope by default
  • Practitioners and animal owners remain in uncertainty
  • ethical providers are left trying to “guess” what’s allowed

In short, the bill could move forward without actually solving the problem it was poised to solve.

Call to action & Updates

HB 3239 started as a promising path toward clarity and accountability. But now, with the certification pathway removed, the work isn’t done; it’s urgent. AOPP is urging supporters to contact Oklahoma lawmakers and request one of two outcomes:

  1. Restore the PEMF certification pathway in HB 3239, and/or
  2. Clearly define PEMF outside the scope of veterinary medicine for qualified non-veterinary providers

AOPP has updated the templates and calls to action on the Oklahoma regulations page to make outreach faster and easier.

https://pemfprofessionals.com/regulation/oklahoma/

AOPP will continue to track the bill closely and update the public and members as it moves through the next steps.

Disclaimer: This post is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice.

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