Regina Leader-Post

National pharmacare plan to be studied

- Naomi Powell

A new advisory panel will be tasked with examining access to pharmacare as Canadians continue to pay some of the highest prices for prescripti­on drugs in advanced countries.

Led by former Ontario health minister Dr. Eric Hoskins, the panel will weigh a potential national pharmacare plan while studying the patchwork of systems currently at work throughout provinces and territorie­s. The panel will also examine internatio­nal models in an attempt to foster better access to prescripti­ons across a wider population.

“It’s not acceptable that a significan­t subset of the population does not have access to pharmaceut­ical products,” Finance Minister Bill Morneau said following the release of the budget Tuesday. “Our goal is to do this in a way that gets at that gap.”

But the announceme­nt of a new panel to study pharmacare could also help the Liberals to kneecap the NDP ahead of the 2019 election. New Democrats have long been calling for a national plan, and seem poised to make pharmacare a central part of their platform.

Speaking to reporters on Parliament Hill Tuesday, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh rejected the idea that the Liberals are manoeuvrin­g to the left to steal NDP votes. “What the government’s proposing is not a plan. This is a fantasy. We don’t see even a single dollar of investment in a plan to implement pharmacare,” he said. “This government is just announcing a study and a study that has no funding behind it. That’s completely unacceptab­le.”

At least one in 10 Canadians cannot afford the prescripti­on drugs they need and those who can pay face some of the highest costs among OECD nations. Canadians spent more than $30 billion in 2016 to fill over 600 million prescripti­ons, according to the Canadian Pharmacist­s Associatio­n. And nearly one million Canadians each year give up food and heat in order to pay for medicine.

Provinces and territorie­s currently have full discretion to distribute health care funding through the Canada Health Transfer program. This year the amount divvied up among the provinces will rise to $38.6 billion. Among countries with universal public health care, Canada is the only one whose plan does not include prescripti­on drug coverage.

No timelines were provided on when the panel — called the Advisory Council on the Implementa­tion of National Pharmacare — will report on its findings.

“We don’t have an answer on exactly when,” Morneau said, adding that Hoskins had only taken up his position a day before.

The challenge of making prescripti­on drugs affordable and available to all Canadians has proven difficult. Canada is the third highest per-capita spender on medicines among OECD nations, but nearly 3.5 million Canadians lack basic coverage.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor with Eric Hoskins, who will chair a pharmacare advisory council.
JUSTIN TANG/THE CANADIAN PRESS Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor with Eric Hoskins, who will chair a pharmacare advisory council.

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