Chamber
nova_scotia
Stage
Introduced
This Nova Scotia bill proposes amendments to the province's Personal Health Information Act from 2010.
Key Changes
- Proposes amendments to Nova Scotia's Personal Health Information Act (Chapter 41 of the Acts of 2010)
- Specific changes cannot be determined as the amendment text was not included in the provided document
Gotchas
- The full text of the amendments was not available in the provided document, so a complete analysis of the bill's content, scope, or impact cannot be provided
- This is a Private Member's Bill introduced by an Independent MLA, which typically has a lower likelihood of passing than government-sponsored legislation
- The bill had only reached First Reading as of February 26, 2025, meaning it had not yet been debated or reviewed by committee
Who's Affected
- Nova Scotia residents whose personal health information is collected or stored
- Health care providers and organizations in Nova Scotia
- Organizations that handle personal health data in Nova Scotia
Vibes
0 responses
Gotchas
- The full text of the amendments was not available in the provided document, so a complete analysis of the bill's content, scope, or impact cannot be provided
- This is a Private Member's Bill introduced by an Independent MLA, which typically has a lower likelihood of passing than government-sponsored legislation
- The bill had only reached First Reading as of February 26, 2025, meaning it had not yet been debated or reviewed by committee
Summary
Bill 46 is a Private Member's Bill introduced by Independent MLA Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin on February 26, 2025 in the Nova Scotia Legislature. It proposes changes to the Personal Health Information Act, which is the provincial law that governs how personal health information about Nova Scotians is collected, used, and shared by health care providers and organizations. Unfortunately, the full text of the specific amendments is not included in the provided document — only the bill's title, introduction date, and legislative progress are shown. Without the actual amendment text, it is not possible to describe exactly what changes are being proposed to the existing 2010 law. The bill was at First Reading stage as of February 26, 2025.
Automatically generated from bill text using Claude
Vibes
0 responses