Times Colonist

Move toward pharmacare

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One can only wonder what it will take for Ottawa to introduce a much-needed national pharmacare program. Universal public coverage of prescripti­on drugs was recommende­d by the 1964 Royal Commission on Health Services, the National Forum on Health in 1997 and by another royal commission five years after that. Meanwhile, study after study has shown it could save the country anywhere from $4 billion to $11.4 billion.

So why hasn’t Ottawa acted? No matter what the overall savings to the country, a national pharmacare program would shift some costs currently borne by individual­s and companies with benefit plans to the federal government.

But now a new study in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal suggests a novel way to break down that political barrier. The idea is to start small. The government could begin by simply covering the 117 essential medicines that account for 44 per cent of all prescripti­ons and 30 per cent of prescripti­on-drug spending.

The study estimates this step would save Canadians and private drug-plans more than $4 billion a year through bulk buying, while costing government $1.2 billion.

Right now Canada is the only country in the world with a national health-care plan that doesn’t cover the cost of prescripti­on medicines. That means many poor people who aren’t covered under private or government plans can’t afford prescripti­on drugs. They often suffer needlessly and require more costly care in the long run.

The Trudeau government should make pharmacare a top priority both to save money and improve care. A small step towards that goal would be a good start.

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