Bill 2 Threatening Care for Quebec LGBTQ+, Homeless, and Vulnerable Populations
Because of Bill 2’s changes to the way doctors will be paid, at least 10 health care clinics taking care of LGBTQ+ people, the homeless, and community sexual health are likely to close in the New Year
This is an excerpt. Read the full piece at The Rover
At least two renowned clinics in Montreal and eight sexual health clinics across Quebec are likely to close because of Bill 2, the provincial government’s controversial healthcare reform.
L’Agora and Quorum are located beside Berri-UQAM metro station. Both treat people with HIV, serve the LGBTQ+ community, the homeless, as well as families in the area. Prelib is a group of clinics throughout the province that help people with sexual health anonymously.
Many more Groupe de médecine de Famille (GMF) clinics beyond these are also in danger of closing, potentially causing many thousands of Quebecers to lose their family doctor.
If the bill continues as written, Dr. Maxim Régimbal-Ethier, founder of Prelib and co-founder of Quorum, says it will lead to Prelib’s immediate closure on Jan. 1, 2026. L’Agora, which often cares for people who are not registered with the provincial medicare system (RAMQ), will have to close down on April 1st unless this is quickly resolved.
The government passed the bill on Oct. 25 using a parliamentary manoeuvre that allows it to circumvent consultation with experts and opposition parties. The bill passed against the advice of doctors across the province, which quickly led to one of the party’s cabinet ministers stepping down, 260 doctors looking to leave the province, and an onslaught of bad press for the already struggling government in what is likely its final year.
“The law is generating a lot of reactions, and that’s normal,” a spokesperson for the Ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux (MSSS) said. “The goal of the law is to increase access.”
Under the new rules in Bill 2, the government is threatening to remove a large portion of payments, up to 15 per cent, to doctors based on yet-to-be-defined parameters.
Dr. Emmanuelle Huchet, the director of l’Agora, explained that future payments will also be based on patient categories: green, yellow, and red. These colours indicate whether a patient is low, medium, or high priority. The payments could vary significantly depending on whether a patient is severely ill, or if they are less ill.
The government has not indicated which colours correspond to sexual health or homelessness, despite several emails from the doctors requesting clarification. If sexual health is ranked lower on this payment scale, it will severely affect the income of all these clinics.
The payment seems to prioritize the number of people seen over the quality of service they receive by discouraging practitioners from spending time with patients. The government has outlined the need for doctors to spend no more than 15 minutes with each patient to improve efficiency.
“We can’t keep these clinics afloat on a shoestring, and clearly, it’s not working,” said Régimbal-Ethier.
The new regulations will cut payments for Prelib. They contacted the government, which said “they understand the uncertainty” and several elements from Bill 2 “remain to be agreed upon.”
Prelib provides rapid, anonymous sexual health assistance and has become an essential resource for people who are unable or unwilling to go to traditional clinics. These clinics help almost 100,000 per year. According to data from Santé Québec, there were about 35000 screening tests done. 22,963 STI screening tests among people aged 14 to 25 were carried out last year in public SIDEP clinics. In the same age group, Prelib performed 19,883 tests. Several other private clinics also offer STI screening, so this seems to indicate that the total number of tests in this age group exceeds 35,000 per year.
“We help sex workers, transgender people, and drug users. We’re taking a broad approach to promote access to sexual health, to create truly inclusive environments,” Régimbal-Ethier said.
His other clinic, Quorum, is also in danger of shutting down. Bill 2 cares about efficiency, but Quorum has a clientele that is predominantly transgender, gay, and often sex workers, who need more time and have a level of trust that they don’t feel in many other places. Régimbal-Ethier said that the clinic handles more sensitive situations and that the bill will cut into its mandate.
“On Jan. 1, 15 per cent of our remuneration will be based on ‘performance indicators.’ But what are these?” said Huchet, the director of l’Agora. The government replied to her that it hadn’t made that decision, but whatever they are, they will be in place on Jan. 1. Huchet is exasperated.
“Well, Jan. 1 is six weeks away!”



