
If you’re a physiotherapist in British Columbia, or you receive care, you may wonder how the new college amalgamation affects physiotherapy oversight.
Regulation changes, but patient safety and professional accountability stay at the core.
In this blog, I’ll explain what the amalgamation means, why it’s happening, and how it impacts physiotherapy practice and oversight in BC.
The BC government is restructuring health profession regulation through the Health Professions and Occupations Act (HPOA).
As part of this process:
This approach reduces duplication, improves consistency, and strengthens public trust in health care regulation.
Physiotherapists no longer operate under a standalone college. They now share oversight with other allied health professions.
The government launched this reform after reviews showed:
According to the BC Health Regulators Association, amalgamation aims to streamline governance so there’s less fragmentation and stronger accountability.
For practicing physiotherapists, the day-to-day changes may feel small at first. You still:
But here’s what’s shifting:
The BC government confirms on its Professional Regulation page that each profession keeps its standards, but a more unified system provides oversight.
For patients, the changes are designed to:
You can explore the Health Professions Designation and Amalgamation Regulation to see how the government has formally designated which colleges were merged.
For Physiotherapists:
For Patients/Public:
The Doctors of BC notes that these reforms are designed to increase accountability and make it easier for the public to trust health regulation.
Of course, no major reform is without challenges. Some key concerns include:
The BCCNM’s amalgamation report shows how other professions, like nursing and midwifery, faced similar challenges but found long-term stability after merging.
Here’s how oversight is expected to function under amalgamation:
This structure ensures physiotherapy expertise isn’t lost, while still benefiting from centralized oversight.
The health colleges in BC have merged, changing the structure but not the purpose of physiotherapy oversight.
Physiotherapists uphold accountability, protect patients, and give the public a simpler, stronger regulatory system.
At Divine Care Physiotherapy, we embrace these changes as an opportunity to strengthen patient trust and ensure every treatment we provide meets the highest professional standards. Oversight evolves, but we keep our commitment to safe, effective, and compassionate care.
