here, a summary of the 2026-05 article "Opinion: The Wrong Prescription for Alaska’s Healthcare Shortage" by MDs Merkouris, Mitchell, Klix and Carlson-Cosentino from the Anchorage Daily News and a comparison to three 2026 CT Reports:
001. a summary via ChatGPT:
"The article “Opinion: The Wrong Prescription for Alaska’s Healthcare Shortage” by Rhene Merkouris, Kristin Mitchell, Mary Klix, and Margaret Carlson-Cosentino argues against expanding naturopathic prescribing authority in Alaska through House Bill 147 and Senate Bill 193.
The MDs make several core points:
1. Medicine requires extensive standardized training and supervision: The authors compare medicine to aviation, emphasizing that both fields depend on rigorous training, specialization, checklists, and oversight. They argue that allowing naturopaths expanded prescribing authority without physician-equivalent clinical education and supervised residency training undermines patient safety.
2. Naturopaths do not receive training equivalent to physicians: The MDs state that physicians receive approximately 12,000–16,000 hours of training, while naturopaths receive about 1,200–1,500 hours. They argue naturopathic education focuses more heavily on nutrition and supplements than on comprehensive medical diagnosis and management.
3. Passing pharmacology coursework is not equivalent to residency training: The article argues that completing pharmacology classes or exams cannot substitute for years of supervised clinical practice and direct patient-care experience required of physicians.
