Regulation of Health Professions in Ontario: Self-Regulation with Statutory-Based Public Accountability

Revista de Direito Sanitário / Journal of Health Law (2019) Vol 19(3), p124-204

40 Pages Posted: 14 Jun 2019

See all articles by Trudo Lemmens

Trudo Lemmens

University of Toronto - Faculty of Law

Kanksha Mahadevia Ghimire

University of Toronto, Faculty of Law

Date Written: April 3, 2019

Abstract

The paper explores the model of regulation of health professionals in Ontario, Canada; a self-regulation model built around a detailed statutory scheme. The core of the paper consists of a discussion of Ontario’s Regulated Health Professions Act and of the key components of 26 specific health profession acts that have been enacted under its umbrella. The paper explores the role of the regulatory colleges, the role of the Ministry of Health in determining scope of practice and other components of medical practice, and the disciplinary and appeal procedures. Some other specific issues are also briefly touched upon, such as the integration into the profession of internationally trained physicians, and the government’s role in ensuring access to specialists across the province. A final section looks at the challenges and the limitations of the Ontario model, through a number of health professions-related controversies that reveal gaps in self-regulation, including: failure to set and enforce proper educational and practice standards in specific areas; failure to conduct timely investigations into potential misconduct by professionals; and failure to question professionals in a position of power. The paper also discusses briefly the implications of recognizing through legal regulation some alternative and complementary medical practices, and the challenge of regulating indigenous health care practitioners. It concludes that the primary limitations of the regulatory model arise on account of professional self-interest and power-relations impacting procedural issues, and the complexity of the regulatory model that may potentially undermine quality control.

Keywords: Canada, Health Professions, Health Work Regulation, Public Accountability

Suggested Citation

Lemmens, Trudo and Mahadevia Ghimire, Kanksha, Regulation of Health Professions in Ontario: Self-Regulation with Statutory-Based Public Accountability (April 3, 2019). Revista de Direito Sanitário / Journal of Health Law (2019) Vol 19(3), p124-204, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3397622

Trudo Lemmens (Contact Author)

University of Toronto - Faculty of Law ( email )

78 and 84 Queen's Park
Toronto, Ontario M5S 2C5
Canada

Kanksha Mahadevia Ghimire

University of Toronto, Faculty of Law ( email )

Toronto
Canada

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