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The Alberta Health Services Board was re-introduced, effective November 27, 2015 with Linda Hughes appointed as the board chair. [25] On April 4, 2022, the AHS Board asked Mauro Chies, Vice President, Cancer Care Alberta and Clinical Support Services, to serve in the role of interim CEO on a temporary basis.
Health Quality Council of Alberta Service Delivery Advises the Minister on the quality of provincial health services, monitors and assesses patient safety and service quality, makes recommendations to improve the strategies, programs, and delivery of safe and quality patient care.
Centennial Centre for Mental Health and Brain Injury (Alberta Hospital Ponoka) Ponoka 52°38′58″N 113°34′25″W / 52.64944°N 113.57361°W / 52.64944; -113.57361 ( Centennial Centre for Mental Health and Brain
MaKami College is a public, [1] not-for-profit [2] post-secondary college in Edmonton and Calgary, Alberta, Canada. It was incorporated in Edmonton in 2001 as a private career college, and was designated an Independent Academic Institution in Alberta in 2023. The college became a not-for-profit educational institution in 2024.
Health regions, also called health authorities, are a governance model used by Canada's provincial and territorial governments to administer and deliver public health care to all Canadian residents. Health care is designated a provincial responsibility under the separation of powers in Canada's federal system. Most health regions or health ...
The Edmonton, Alberta-headquartered Alberta Health Services (AHS), was established in 2008 as the "first province-wide, fully integrated health system" in Canada. The AHS delivers medical care on behalf of the Government of Alberta's Ministry of Health. [5] The AHS serves 4.3 million Albertans and has a staff of 125,000 staff and 10,000 physicians.
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]
The Medical Profession Act was passed after Alberta became a province in 1905. In 1906, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta (CPSA) was formed in Calgary, covering physician licensing and discipline, followed shortly after by the forming of the Canadian Medical Association, Alberta Division (renamed the Alberta Medical Association in the 1960s), an educational body also concerned ...