Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. to change law to stop employers from asking for 'unnecessary' doctor sick notes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2025 11:12 AM
  • B.C. to change law to stop employers from asking for 'unnecessary' doctor sick notes

Changes to British Columbia's employment standards legislation to no longer allow employers to require sick notesfor short term absences are welcome after a decade of advocacy, says Doctors of BC president Dr. Charlene Lui. 

"This is an issue that Doctors of BC has spent more than 10 years advocating for, and it is part of our broader effort toreduce overall administrative burden for doctors," Lui said Tuesday. 

She said the group is "very pleased" that the province has moved to eliminate the need for employees to get "routine sick notes" for short-term absences from work. 

British Columbia's labour and health ministries announced Tuesday that changes would be made to the province's Employment Standards Act, which will stop employers fromasking employees for "unnecessary" sick notes, Labour Minister Jennifer Whiteside said. 

Whiteside said the move will allow health care workers toattend to patients and not spend time on the "administrative burden" of providing workers with sick notes to justify staying home from work. 

"We have heard loud and clear that they are spending far too much of their valuable time on paperwork," Whiteside said at a news conference. "Not only does it create extra work fordoctors and nurses, but the last thing a person who is sickshould have to do is get out of bed and go to a clinic." 

The ministries said in a statement that the current law allows employers to request proof of sickness from employees, but the changes will "clarify" that workers are not required toprovide sick notes for short-term absences. 

Health Minister Josie Osborne said doctors across B.C. have indicated that dealing with "unnecessary paperwork" like sicknotes takes up time they could be using to care for patients. 

Osborne said making people leave home for sick notes can "can often do more harm than good," by spreading illnesses and delaying their recovery, while "making it harder for people who have more urgent issues to be able to see their health care provider."

The ministries said the new regulations will establish what constitutes a short-term absence, and they're set to be in place before respiratory illness season begins this fall. 

The changes come after both the Canadian Medical Association and Doctors of BC advocated for sick note requirements to be eliminated last year

The association estimates that B.C. doctors wrote about 1.6 million sick notes last year. 

Lui said she suspects the changes were made in recognition of current inefficiencies in accessing family physicians, and the time they spent on paperwork rather than care. 

She said employers may have been "quite concerned" about employees using sick days inappropriately, but disallowing them from requiring notes "is a big move in the right direction." 

Lui said there are some circumstances where sick notes are appropriate, such as "prolonged absences" where a doctor"can provide some meaningful insight into an employee's condition.

Lui said workers who catch the common cold, however, shouldn't be made to leave home to get a note for a few days off work to recover. 

"Those are the circumstances where we don't see the value of requiring a sick note," she said. 

"This is an issue that Doctors of BC has spent more than 10 years advocating for, and it is part of our broader effort toreduce overall administrative burden for doctors," Lui said Tuesday. 

She said the group is "very pleased" that the province has moved to eliminate the need for employees to get "routine sick notes" for short-term absences from work. 

British Columbia's labour and health ministries announced Tuesday that changes would be made to the province's Employment Standards Act, which will stop employers fromasking employees for "unnecessary" sick notes, Labour Minister Jennifer Whiteside said. 

Whiteside said the move will allow health care workers toattend to patients and not spend time on the "administrative burden" of providing workers with sick notes to justify staying home from work. 

"We have heard loud and clear that they are spending far too much of their valuable time on paperwork," Whiteside said at a news conference. "Not only does it create extra work fordoctors and nurses, but the last thing a person who is sickshould have to do is get out of bed and go to a clinic." 

The ministries said in a statement that the current law allows employers to request proof of sickness from employees, but the changes will "clarify" that workers are not required toprovide sick notes for short-term absences. 

Health Minister Josie Osborne said doctors across B.C. have indicated that dealing with "unnecessary paperwork" like sicknotes takes up time they could be using to care for patients. 

Osborne said making people leave home for sick notes can "can often do more harm than good," by spreading illnesses and delaying their recovery, while "making it harder for people who have more urgent issues to be able to see their health care provider."

The ministries said the new regulations will establish what constitutes a short-term absence, and they're set to be in place before respiratory illness season begins this fall. 

The changes come after both the Canadian Medical Association and Doctors of BC advocated for sick note requirements to be eliminated last year

The association estimates that B.C. doctors wrote about 1.6 million sick notes last year. 

Lui said she suspects the changes were made in recognition of current inefficiencies in accessing family physicians, and the time they spent on paperwork rather than care. 

She said employers may have been "quite concerned" about employees using sick days inappropriately, but disallowing them from requiring notes "is a big move in the right direction." 

Lui said there are some circumstances where sick notes are appropriate, such as "prolonged absences" where a doctor"can provide some meaningful insight into an employee's condition.

Lui said workers who catch the common cold, however, shouldn't be made to leave home to get a note for a few days off work to recover. 

"Those are the circumstances where we don't see the value of requiring a sick note," she said. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Descent warning triggered on Delta plane seconds before it crashed at Pearson: report

Descent warning triggered on Delta plane seconds before it crashed at Pearson: report
A preliminary report into a plane crash at Toronto's Pearson airport last month says the aircraft's alert system issued a warning about the descent rate less than three seconds before touchdown. The Transportation Safety Board of Canada released its report Thursday morning as it continues to investigate the Feb. 17 crash landing that sent 21 people to hospital, noting that it's too early to draw any conclusions.

Descent warning triggered on Delta plane seconds before it crashed at Pearson: report

RCMP in Northwest Territories charge B.C. man in fatal shooting

RCMP in Northwest Territories charge B.C. man in fatal shooting
RCMP say charges have been laid in a shooting that killed one person and injured two others in the Northwest Territories. Officers responded to a home early Saturday morning in the hamlet of Fort Providence, where a 31-year-old man was found dead.

RCMP in Northwest Territories charge B.C. man in fatal shooting

Body of missing Langley senior found months after she went missing: RCMP

Body of missing Langley senior found months after she went missing: RCMP
Mounties in Langley say the body of an 82-year-old woman has been found several months after she went missing. Jane Whitehouse was reported missing on Oct. 25 last year. 

Body of missing Langley senior found months after she went missing: RCMP

Poilievre says he wants to greenlight Ring of Fire mining permits within six months

Poilievre says he wants to greenlight Ring of Fire mining permits within six months
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said Wednesday he'll "set a deadline" to approve all federal permits for mining in northwestern Ontario's Ring of Fire region within six months. Poilievre said that a Conservative government would also commit $1 billion over three years to build a road network to link the mining sites to Ontario's highway network and First Nations communities in the area.

Poilievre says he wants to greenlight Ring of Fire mining permits within six months

Gang police allege Vancouver man ran 'sophisticated' gun importation scheme

Gang police allege Vancouver man ran 'sophisticated' gun importation scheme
A 24-year-old Vancouver man faces several charges after investigators dismantled what they say was a "sophisticated" gun importation operation. The Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit says the charges come after an investigation that began in June 2023 when packages with gun parts were "intercepted at the border." 

Gang police allege Vancouver man ran 'sophisticated' gun importation scheme

B.C. shuts door on secondary-suite incentive program over 'uncertain financial times'

B.C. shuts door on secondary-suite incentive program over 'uncertain financial times'
The British Columbia government says it is cancelling an incentive program meant to entice more homeowners to build secondary suites, saying the decision is "due to uncertain financial times."  The government says in a statement that the pilot program won't accept applications after March 31. 

B.C. shuts door on secondary-suite incentive program over 'uncertain financial times'