17ProvincialHealth
Login to subscribe to this bill

Medical Act (amended)

Chamber

nova_scotia

Stage

Introduced

This Nova Scotia bill amends the Medical Act to address sexual assault committed by medical practitioners.

Key Changes

  • Amends the Nova Scotia Medical Act (Chapter 38, Acts of 2011) to address sexual assault by medical practitioners
  • Likely introduces or strengthens provisions related to discipline or reporting of sexual assault within the medical profession
  • May define or clarify what constitutes sexual assault in a medical practitioner context under the Act

Gotchas

  • The full legislative text was not available in the provided content, so specific provisions, penalties, or procedural changes cannot be confirmed
  • This is a private member's bill introduced by an Independent MLA, meaning it may face a lower likelihood of passage without government support
  • The bill was only at First Reading as of February 19, 2025, meaning it had not yet been debated or amended

Who's Affected

  • Medical practitioners (doctors) licensed in Nova Scotia
  • Patients who have experienced or may experience sexual assault by a medical practitioner
  • The Nova Scotia College of Physicians and Surgeons (regulatory body)
  • Medical regulatory and disciplinary bodies in Nova Scotia

Summary

Bill 17 is a private member's bill introduced in the Nova Scotia Legislature by Independent MLA Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin. It proposes amendments to Nova Scotia's Medical Act (2011) specifically related to sexual assault by medical practitioners. The bill targets the conduct of doctors and other medical practitioners who commit sexual assault, likely by strengthening the rules around discipline, reporting, or consequences for such behaviour within the medical profession's regulatory framework. Because only the bill's title and introduction details are available in the provided text — not the full legislative text — the specific provisions cannot be fully detailed. However, the bill's stated purpose is to address sexual assault by medical practitioners, suggesting it may involve changes to how complaints are handled, how practitioners are disciplined, or how such offences are defined under the Medical Act.

Automatically generated from bill text using Claude

Vibes

0 responses

Support 0
Neutral 0
Oppose 0
login to share your opinion
login to share your opinion
login to share your opinion