B.C. Appeal Court sides with mom in case involving access to parental medical records
VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government has a year to fix its child protection laws after an Appeal Court panel found the legislation unreasonably gave social workers power to access parents’ highly sensitive medical information.
The B.C. Court of Appeal struck down a section of B.C.’s Child, Family and Community Service Act, finding it allowed social workers to look at a parent’s medical records without consent, a search warrant or a court order.
The three-judge panel found part of the act unconstitutional because it lacked safeguards to protect parents’ deeply personal medical information, violating the Charter’s guarantees against unreasonable search and seizure.
The court found the act allowed child welfare workers with the Ministry of Children and Family Development to access a parent’s information through public bodies, including hospitals and medical clinics.

