This program is accredited by the State of Massachusetts Dept. of Education (I've written this before), not an association or self-organized fox-watching-the-hen-house accreditation council like the naturopaths have, nor an association like Council on Higher Education.
(CHEA is an association of 3,000 degree-granting colleges and universities, which also recognizes 60 institutional and programmatic accrediting organizations. Each accreditor is independent, which means the requirements vary from group to group. The association is based in Wash. DC).
There are too many certificate programs and continuing ed programs through colleges and universities and vocational schools. I wouldn't be able to list them all here, nor should I need to. University of Dentistry and Medicine of NJ has several, teaching hospitals have them, for instance, diabetes dietary educator or health education specialist certificates are professional certificates that one does not need to be a registered dietician to take. This is not an unusual program.
The written material on the endocrine system has nothing about chakras. The written stuff is basic A&P of the endocrine system, processes and interrelationships of secreting organs, diseases or symptoms of malfunctioning organs, effects of stress and the different stages of development through the life span.
Compensatory means just that, if an excess of fat is causing, for instance, pancreatitis or something, Ornish's diet would be the one to temporarily use for that particular patient. Ornish's diet program is covered by insurance and Medicare in the US. The instructor is not selling diets, just providing info for potential instruction to patients who might demand an Ornish diet, for instance, who might not be suitable candidates for one.
There is no mention so far of quantum anything. References to QM were made by me when I asked them if that is what they were teaching.
Thanks. You've all been very helpful.