Tuesday, January 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canadian doctors group challenging constitutionality of Alberta transgender law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 May, 2025 02:01 PM
  • Canadian doctors group challenging constitutionality of Alberta transgender law

group representing Canada's doctors is challenging the constitutionality of Alberta's legislation limiting access to medical treatment for transgender youth, arguing it violates their Charter right to freedom of conscience.

The Canadian Medical Association says the challenge, filed Wednesday in Alberta Court of King's Bench, is meant to protect the relationship between patients and doctors when it comes to making treatment decisions.

"This is a historic and unprecedented government intrusion into the physician-patient relationship and requires doctors to follow the law rather than clinical guidelines, the needs of patients and their own conscience," the association said in a statement.

The legislation was part of a trio of bills affecting transgender people that Alberta Premier Danielle Smith's government passed last year.

The association, which represents more than 75,000 physicians, is specifically challenging the bill that blocks doctors from prescribing hormone therapy and puberty blockers to children under 16 and bans gender reassignment surgeries for those under 18.

The other bills ban transgender women from competing in amateur women's sports and require children under 16 to have parental consent to change their names or pronouns at school.

Smith has said the medical treatment legislation is necessary to protect children and ensure they don't make major decisions before they become adults.

Dr. Jake Donaldson, who is one of three Alberta-based doctors involved in the court challenge, said the law has put him and other doctors in a "state of moral crisis."

"It is encroaching upon sort of the autonomy of physicians and our ability to provide what we believe is best, and individualized, evidence-based care for patients," the Calgary family doctor said in an interview.

"It forces me to sort of stand on the sidelines and refuse to provide care to patients who would otherwise, in all likelihood, significantly benefit from it."

Donaldson said he has roughly 40 young patients who receive the kinds of treatment the law outlaws, although a grandfather clause in the legislation means those patients aren't being cut off.

"From the standpoint of gender-affirming care, what we are able to do in the medical world is help people," Donaldson said.

"There's good evidence behind what we're doing, (and) there are guidelines that we follow. Nobody's making decisions willy-nilly."

Association president Dr. Joss Reimer said Donaldson isn't alone in being in a moral crisis as a result of the law.

She said the association doesn't want to see physicians "put in a position where they have to choose between following their ethical guidelines ... following what their college expects of them, what the guidelines say, or following the law."

"It's not unprecedented for the CMA to get involved in legal matters, but it was unprecedented for a bill in Canada to restrict the ability for physicians to offer advice to patients," Reimer said.

Alberta Justice Minister Mickey Amery's press secretary Heather Jenkins said in an email that the government believes the bill will protect children from making "irreversible decisions."

"Alberta’s government will vigorously defend our position in court," Jenkins said.

The association isn't the first to challenge the constitutionality of Smith's legislation.

In December, advocacy groups Egale Canada and the Skipping Stone Foundation, as well as five Alberta families, launched a Charter challenge against all three bills. They also filed for an injunction.

Hearings for the injunction application took place in Calgary in March, but a judge has yet to make a ruling.

A spokesperson for Egale said in a statement that it welcomes the medical group's challenge.

"No one benefits when governments insert themselves into the relationship between doctors and patients," it said.

Smith has previously said she thinks the three bills strike a fair balance and that the Charter allows for limits on rights.

“We have all kinds of restrictions on the ability of minors to make decisions. And we do that because we want to make sure that they are at full capacity to be able to make decisions that are going to be consequential to them,” the premier said in December.

Smith said later that month that she would use the Charter's notwithstanding clause "as a last resort" to override possible breaches to ensure the legislation is implemented.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

MORE National ARTICLES

Hockey players had group chat to discuss response to sex assault allegations: witness

Hockey players had group chat to discuss response to sex assault allegations: witness
An Ontario court is hearing that members of Canada's 2018 world junior hockey team formed a group chat to discuss how to respond to a Hockey Canada investigation into allegations of sexual assault a week after an encounter with a woman in a London, Ont., hotel room.

Hockey players had group chat to discuss response to sex assault allegations: witness

Eby says government can't interfere in RCMP probe of leaked document

Eby says government can't interfere in RCMP probe of leaked document
Premier David Eby has rejected Opposition accusations that his government went after a whistleblower, while suggesting more effort should go into investigating problems in opioid prescriptions that they highlighted rather than the source of the leaks.

Eby says government can't interfere in RCMP probe of leaked document

Almost half of Canadians say Carney 'stood up' for country in Trump meeting: poll

Almost half of Canadians say Carney 'stood up' for country in Trump meeting: poll
A new poll suggests nearly half of Canadians think Prime Minister Mark Carney "stood up" for Canada in his recent face-to-face meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump.

Almost half of Canadians say Carney 'stood up' for country in Trump meeting: poll

PM Carney travelling to Rome Friday for Pope Leo's inaugural mass

PM Carney travelling to Rome Friday for Pope Leo's inaugural mass
Prime Minister Mark Carney is heading to Rome on Friday to attend Pope Leo's inaugural mass.

PM Carney travelling to Rome Friday for Pope Leo's inaugural mass

Despite a polarizing election, poll suggests Canadians don't want a two-party system

Despite a polarizing election, poll suggests Canadians don't want a two-party system
While the recent federal election turned into a tight race between the Liberals and Conservatives that left other parties trailing far behind, a new poll suggests most Canadians don't want the country end up with a two-party system.

Despite a polarizing election, poll suggests Canadians don't want a two-party system

Canadian youth struggle with making friends and bullying: UNICEF report

Canadian youth struggle with making friends and bullying: UNICEF report
A global study from UNICEF suggests many Canadian kids are unhappy, with social struggles such as bullying and difficulty making friends among the sources of their anguish. 

Canadian youth struggle with making friends and bullying: UNICEF report