Patient Privacy in Saskatchewan
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from Canadian federal statutes and official sources. Provincial information reflects each province's own legislation and court rulings. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
Your health information is protected at both the federal level (PIPEDA) and by provincial health privacy laws. Most provinces have dedicated health privacy statutes, such as Ontario's PHIPA, Alberta's HIA, and Saskatchewan's HIPA.
The key principles are:
- Only collect, use, and disclose what is necessary
- Require your knowledge and consent (with limited exceptions like public health reporting)
- Keep your data secure
- Retain records only as long as needed
You have the right to access your own medical records — providers must typically respond within 30 days. You can also request corrections to errors in your file and file complaints with the privacy commissioner if your information is improperly disclosed.
When does it apply?
- Every patient whose health information is collected by healthcare providers, hospitals, pharmacies, or labs.
What to Do If Your Medical Information Is Shared Without Your Consent in Canada
- Request your medical records in writing — the provider must respond within approximately 30 days.
- Ask who has access to your health information and why.
- Request corrections if you find errors in your medical records.
- File a complaint with the provincial privacy commissioner if your health information is disclosed without your consent.
- Use patient portals where available to monitor who is accessing your records.
What should you NOT do?
- Don't assume providers automatically share records — there is no single national electronic health record system in Canada.
- Don't ignore breach notifications — if a provider tells you your data was compromised, take it seriously and follow up.
- Don't share your health card number casually — it can be used for identity fraud.
- Don't assume your employer can access your full medical details — they are only entitled to fit-for-duty information, not your diagnosis or treatment specifics.
How Saskatchewan differs from federal law
Patient privacy in Saskatchewan is protected by The Health Information Protection Act (HIPA), SS 1999, c. H-0.021, one of Canada's earliest health privacy statutes.
- HIPA governs how trustees (healthcare providers, hospitals, the SHA, government health agencies) collect, use, disclose, and protect your personal health information.
- Your personal health information can only be collected, used, or disclosed for purposes that are necessary and authorized under the Act. Your healthcare provider cannot share your records without your consent, except in limited circumstances (treatment purposes, mandatory public health reporting, court orders).
- You have the right to access your own health records. A trustee must respond to your request within 30 days.
- You have the right to request corrections to inaccurate or incomplete health records.
- Trustees must have security safeguards to protect your information from unauthorized access, theft, or loss.
Additional Steps in Saskatchewan
To access your health records, submit a written request to your healthcare provider. They must respond within 30 days. If you believe your health information was improperly accessed or disclosed, file a complaint with the Saskatchewan Information and Privacy Commissioner at 306-787-8350 or oipc.sk.ca. The Commissioner can investigate and make recommendations or orders.
Relevant Law: The Health Information Protection Act, SS 1999, c. H-0.021
Common Questions
When does patient privacy apply?
Every patient whose health information is collected by healthcare providers, hospitals, pharmacies, or labs.
What should I do if my health information in Canada was disclosed without my permission?
Request your medical records in writing — the provider must respond within approximately 30 days.Ask who has access to your health information and why.Request corrections if you find errors in your medical records.File a complaint with the provincial privacy commissioner if your health information is disclosed without your consent.Use patient portals where available to monitor who is accessing your records.
What mistakes should I avoid with patient privacy?
Don't assume providers automatically share records — there is no single national electronic health record system in Canada.Don't ignore breach notifications — if a provider tells you your data was compromised, take it seriously and follow up.Don't share your health card number casually — it can be used for identity fraud.Don't assume your employer can access your full medical details — they are only entitled to fit-for-duty information, not your diagnosis or treatment specifics.
Patient Privacy in other states
Same topic, different jurisdiction. Pick the one that applies to you.