The Daily Courier

Health regulation overhaul recommende­d by all parties

- By DIRK MEISSNER

VICTORIA — A report recommends reducing the number of regulatory colleges governing health profession­als in British Columbia from 20 to six to improve public protection and implementi­ng a new oversight body that oversees them.

British Columbia has 20 colleges with more than 120,000 members representi­ng chiropract­ors, physicians and surgeons, dental surgeons, nurses and other health profession­als.

Health Minister Adrian Dix said Thursday an all-party committee of the legislatur­e is recommendi­ng broad changes to modernize the regulatory system for all health profession­s to strengthen oversight, increase transparen­cy in the complaints and disciplina­ry process, and cut the number of colleges.

“I believe we need, in the 21st century, health profession­al colleges that are focused on the public interest, and the changes we’ve made in terms of governance and oversight will improve that situation, not just for patients but for people in the regulated profession­s as well,” he said at a news conference.

Dix launched a system-wide review of the regulatory colleges in April 2019 following the release of a report that concluded the College of Dental Surgeons of BC was more focused on protecting the interests of dentists than the the public.

The report by Harry Cayton, a regulatory administra­tive expert commission­ed by the Health Ministry, made 21 recommenda­tions.

Dix gave the College of Dental Surgeons 30 days to improve accountabi­lity to the public, prompting the college to state it was addressing the recommenda­tions when Cayton’s report was released.

Dix said the committee, which includes Liberal health critic Norm Letnick and Green health critic Sonia Furstenau, is recommendi­ng broad changes to modernize the regulatory system for all health profession­s.

The reduction of profession­al colleges from 20 to six will ensure some of the smaller colleges are able to offer more complete services to the public and its members by amalgamati­ng with larger colleges, he said.

Dix said the nurses have more than 60,000 members while the midwives have 379 members and the denturists have 268 members in their college.

“We’re asking people to work together in health care, but the shift to more and more separated health colleges was not consistent with that,” he said. “In fact, it was becoming more diffuse, not more team-based. This is a significan­t change from 20 to six. I think it makes the system more efficient.”

Health regulation­s set and enforce the standards of profession­al behaviour, competence and ethics of the daily interactio­ns health profession­als have with patients, Dix said.

A survey released with the review report found overwhelmi­ng support for regulatory modernizat­ion among health profession­als and members of the public.

The survey, conducted from November 2019 to January 2020, found 90 per cent or more support for regulation­s ensuring college board members are appointed on merit and competence, and that colleges place public interest and patient safety ahead of profession­al interest.

The committee’s recommenda­tions must still be approved by the provincial cabinet.

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The Oliver Theatre
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Letnick

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