Recently, I attended a chiropractic conference in a state in which I do not hold a license to practice chiropractic. While there, many people I did not know came up to me and asked if I would adjust them.
Much to my surprise, most of those who asked looked at me as if there were something wrong with me when I said, "No, I'm not licensed here." They seemed shocked that I would not adjust them because I was not licensed. One would have thought that I was speaking a foreign language when I said I couldn't adjust them.
Many tried to convince me it was OK to treat them without a license because they didn't care. They had no idea who I was, but were insistent upon having me treat them. The only argument that seemed to work to stop them from trying to convince me to violate state regulations was to tell them I taught risk-management postgraduate courses, and that the organization I taught for was around the corner in the exhibit area and would fire me if they saw me adjusting.
There were other chiropractors adjusting people who were also strangers to them (I knew this because I often heard their introductions). In fact, I saw people lined up to be adjusted by these doctors. In a couple of cases, the doctors doing the treating were familiar to me – they teach postgraduate courses that have been well-publicized or they are prominent within the profession in some other way. Still, for some of their new "patients," it was obvious that they were getting treated not because of the doctor's reputation, but because they had a line of people waiting to get treated.
Now, I cannot be sure, but it I believe that most of these doctors were not licensed in the conference state, either; however, I know at least a few of them weren't, as they told me they weren't during conversations I had with them.
The people who asked me to treat them were either doctors of chiropractic or chiropractic office staff. These were people who, in theory, know about the importance of licensure.