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Alberta Health Services (AHS) is the single health authority for the Canadian province of Alberta and the "largest integrated provincial health care system" in Canada. Headquartered in Edmonton , AHS delivers medical care on behalf of the Government of Alberta's Ministry of Health . [ 3 ]
Health: Alberta College of Pharmacy Regulatory/Adjudicative Directs and regulates the practice of pharmacists in Alberta. Health: Alberta College of Social Workers Regulatory/Adjudicative Directs and regulates the practice of social workers in Alberta. Health: Alberta College of Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists Regulatory/Adjudicative
This became more acute in the period between 1943 and 1952 as Canada's health services were expanding, and the number of hospital beds increased along with the number of hospitalizations. [1] By the mid-1940s across Canada the shortage, estimated at 8,700, led to a re-organization and re-conceptualization of nursing in Canada, according to a ...
Health care: employees of health care providers, including Alberta Health Services, as well as other public, private and not-for-profit facilities, over 55,000 members. Education: non-academic employees of universities , community colleges , technical institutes and school boards , more than 11,000 members.
The Edmonton, Alberta-headquartered Alberta Health Services (AHS) was established on May 15, 2008 as a quasi-independent agency of the Alberta government with a mandate to deliver public health services throughout Alberta. [14]
Pages in category "Alberta government departments and agencies" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The United Conservative Party (UCP) government under Premier Jason Kenney and Alberta Health Services, notified Health Sciences Association of Alberta, United Nurses of Alberta, and the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees of the government's intentions to cut an "estimated 6,400 to 7,400 unionized public-sector jobs by 2023". [3]
Originally created as the "Department of Health" in 1919—in the wake of the Spanish flu crisis [4] —what is known as Health Canada today was formed in 1993 from the former Health and Welfare Canada department (established in 1944), which split into two separate units; the other department being Human Resources and Labour Canada. [5]