During Thursday’s 2026/2027 Budget Debate in the Bahamas House of Assembly, State Minister for Health and Wellness Owen Wells outlined a far-reaching legislative and administrative reform package aimed at modernizing the country’s healthcare sector, with new regulation of the funeral services industry highlighted as a key priority for protecting vulnerable grieving families.
Wells emphasized that families place unparalleled trust in funeral service providers during periods of profound loss, creating a critical need for formal oversight to guarantee ethical, professional care. The upcoming Funeral Services Industry Bill will enshrine binding requirements for operator licensing, uniform professional standards, robust consumer protections, and formal accountability mechanisms, all designed to ensure services uphold the dignity that end-of-life care demands. While the core framework of the legislation has been confirmed, Minister Wells did not release further details on timelines for tabling the bill, proposed penalties for non-compliance, or the specific agency that will be tasked with enforcing the new rules.
The funeral industry regulation is just one component of a broader push to expand and update healthcare sector governance. Minister Wells confirmed that the ministry is also advancing three other key legislative initiatives: a Patients’ Rights Bill, an updated Elderly Abandonment Bill, and ongoing work to embed other existing health legislation into force.
The Patients’ Rights Bill will establish a formal, clear framework to guide interactions between patients and healthcare providers, codifying core protections including informed consent for medical procedures, patient confidentiality, guaranteed access to personal health information, mandatory professional conduct standards, and requirements for respectful treatment of all care recipients. For vulnerable older Bahamians, the revised Elderly Abandonment Bill will strengthen existing legal protections, set clearer care standards, and reinforce commitments to upholding the dignity and overall wellbeing of the country’s aging population.
Beyond legislative changes, the ministry is pursuing structural administrative reforms to keep pace with its growing scope of work. For years, the ministry has relied on external legal support from the Public Hospitals Authority, the Office of the Attorney General, and the Department of Legal Affairs to handle regulatory and legal matters. As the sector expands and modernizes, Wells announced that a dedicated in-house Legal Unit will be established during the 2026/2027 fiscal period.
This internal legal team will cut response times for pressing regulatory and legal issues, reduce costly delays in contract negotiations, strengthen public procurement processes, and ensure all ministry policies and programs are legally sound from their design stage. The new unit will also reduce the administrative burden on the Office of the Attorney General by handling routine and specialized health sector legal work internally, including licensing reviews, administrative actions, contract drafting, regulatory rollout, and clinical governance matters.
To address longstanding coordination gaps across the public healthcare system, Wells also announced the creation of a Public Health Operations Task Force. The inter-agency body will conduct a comprehensive review of how core public health entities – including the Ministry of Health and Wellness, the Department of Public Health, Princess Margaret Hospital, Rand Memorial Hospital, the Supplies Management Agency, and other relevant stakeholders – interact and operate. It will map existing workflows, identify systemic bottlenecks and service duplication, and propose evidence-based practical solutions to streamline cross-agency coordination and improve service delivery for patients.
Digital modernization of health records will also remain a key priority during the upcoming budget cycle. The ministry will continue rolling out universal Electronic Medical Records across all Department of Public Health facilities, while working to integrate these systems with other major public healthcare institutions. Plans are also in place to strengthen the national Health Information Exchange, allowing authorized care providers to securely access critical patient data when needed for treatment.
Wells pushed back against any perception that these reforms are merely bureaucratic adjustments, noting that every proposed change is centered on people. “These topics may appear administrative in nature, but their purpose is people-centred and intended to protect patients, support families, assist healthcare workers and strengthen public confidence in our healthcare system,” he said. The government’s overall legislative agenda for the health sector is focused on four core goals: strengthening patient protections, updating outdated professional regulations, improving national public health preparedness, and supporting innovation in how care is delivered to Bahamian communities.
