In 2026, Ontario amended the regulations governing Applied Behaviour Analysts under the Psychology and Applied Behaviour Analysis Act. Client records aren't a back-office afterthought anymore—they are a serious matter of professional accountability under provincial privacy law. myABAKiS handles the tracking and security automatically, ensuring your practice is fully compliant, so you can close the binders and get back to the learner.
A health information custodian shall take steps that are reasonable in the circumstances to ensure that personal health information… is protected against theft, loss and unauthorized use or disclosure.
This rule anchors everything.
Every CPBAO standard, professional expectation, and risk of discipline flows from this one core obligation. If a learner's information is in your custody or control, you must take reasonable steps to protect it.
Where that record actually sits changes nothing. The obligation stays with you.
Section 12(2) adds a companion duty. If personal health information is lost, stolen, or shared without authority, you have to notify the affected individual at the first reasonable opportunity—and certain breaches must also be reported to the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario.
Disclaimer
This page is published by myABAKiS for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or an interpretation of any specific provision of PHIPA, the Psychology and Applied Behaviour Analysis Act, 2021, or CPBAO standards. Registrants with specific questions about their obligations should consult CPBAO, the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, or qualified legal counsel. Statutory quotations are reproduced as enacted; full text is available on the Government of Ontario's e-Laws.
Primary Sources