
Alberta Moves to Enable Final Steps in Health-Care Overhaul
Bill 55, the Health Statutes Amendment Act, 2025, was
Speaking at a May 1
The province has been working on a health-care overhaul
All of the new agencies
The new model was shaped through province-wide public engagement sessions, where Albertans and health-care workers shared their views on 'what a refocused health-care system looks like to them,' LaGrange said. The health-care restructuring won't disrupt delivery, the province said, adding there will be no job losses or changes to collective bargaining processes.
Amendments
Bill 55 amends the Public Health Act to transfer functions such as policy development, as well as public health inspections and surveillance, from AHS to the health ministry.
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Changes to the act would also transfer front-line public health duties, including communicable disease control, immunizations, and health promotion, from AHS to Primary Care Alberta. In addition, the province's medical officers of health would move into the office of the chief medical officer of health.
The bill also amends the Health Information Act to grant the ministry of seniors, community and social services 'further powers,' including the collection, use, and disclosure of health information deemed necessary for its role as the sector ministry for continuing care, the province said. This ministry will be in charge of Assisted Living Alberta.
The province also proposes changes to the Protection of Persons in Care Act, saying it 'takes all allegations of abuse in publicly funded care facilities seriously.' The changes would provide additional capacity to investigate abuse allegations, particularly those involving adult patients.
Another proposed change would repeal certain sections of the Hospitals Act and incorporate elements of it into the Provincial Health Agencies Act, with the aim of streamlining health system governance under a single statute. Officials said the Hospitals Act is 'outdated legislation,' and that the changes won't impact quality of care in hospitals.
Health reform has been a key part of Premier Danielle Smith's agenda. She has previously said she is not satisfied with the state of health care in the province.
'It's no secret I have been unhappy with the level and quality of service delivered by AHS and in the inability of AHS to deliver quality and timely healthcare to Albertans,' she said in a Feb. 8 social media
'I will continue to relentlessly push forward to make improvements. Although that has required difficult decisions and major change, I do not accept the current results.'
As part of recent changes to the health system, the province announced last month a shift to an '
The change, the premier said, was aimed at increasing accountability and encouraging competition among medical centres while decreasing wait times. Meanwhile, the Opposition NDP has argued the change is a further step toward privatizing health care.
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