Why this article is proposed
Informed consent and bodily autonomy are foundational principles in Canadian medical practice, but they have largely been protected through common law and professional standards rather than entrenched constitutional text. Recent public-health measures have sharpened public interest in formalizing these protections. The article would entrench them in a provincial constitution.
What it would change
Section 1 entrenches informed consent. Section 2 prohibits coercion or discrimination based on refusal of medical treatment, with a narrow public-health exception. Section 3 entrenches conscience protection for health-care practitioners. Section 4 confirms parental authority over minor children's health care, with a court-order exception. Section 5 conditions any emergency override on time limits, legislative review, and proportionality.
The legal basis
Health care delivery is provincial under Constitution Act, 1867 s.92(7) (provincial hospitals) and s.92(16) (matters of a local or private nature). Health professions are regulated provincially. Constitution Act, 1982 s.45 lets Alberta entrench provincial law on these subjects. The article cannot bind federally regulated workplaces, federal border measures, or the federal exercise of the criminal-law power (which includes the regulation of certain drugs and procedures).
Open questions
Three questions for Albertans: how to define "clear and imminent harm to others" in Section 2 so that it sets a workable threshold for legitimate public-health measures without being so broad that the right to refuse becomes nominal; how to align Section 4 with the mature minor doctrine recognized in A.C. v. Manitoba; and whether Section 3's conscience protection should include a duty of effective referral, as the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta currently requires.