Times Colonist

B.C. launches strategy to close research gaps after ministry firings

- CINDY E. HARNETT ceharnett@timescolon­ist.com

B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix launched a new strategy Thursday aimed at filling gaps in evidenced-based research created by a mass firing of Health Ministry researcher­s in 2012.

The strategy, which received $5 million in funding, comes in response to a recommenda­tion in B.C. ombudspers­on Jay Chalke’s 2017 report into the Health Ministry firings of eight workers.

Chalke’s report said flawed investigat­ions and rushed decision-making resulted in key government officials taking action that had far-reaching and harmful consequenc­es.

One of his recommenda­tions was that the ministry address gaps in evidenceba­sed programs that were created during the firings.

Dix said much important work was lost after key researcher­s were fired and some funding was suspended.

The strategy is about improving the public health-care system through robust, unbiased analysis and evaluation, “filling gaps created by the damaging impact of the health firings,” and making the ministry “a forerunner again in evidenceba­sed research and analysis,” he said.

“I think most Canadians believe, and I believe, that public health care is central to what we are as a country.”

The ministry will work with the Therapeuti­cs Initiative to develop a new program to help doctors with prescribin­g of drugs. The University of B.C.-based organizati­on will also review how drugs are being used, including whether they are being prescribed properly, their costeffect­iveness, and new informatio­n on safety and therapeuti­c value.

“There are about more than 600 people whose principal job in B.C. is to sell drugs to doctors on behalf of pharmaceut­ical companies,” Dix said Thursday at a news conference.

Those who provide independen­t informatio­n number much fewer, he said. “And so what we’re attempting to do with the Therapeuti­cs Initiative is to provide independen­t evidence so that critical decisions that often take place in a very short visit to the doctor’s office are based on the newest available evidence.”

Implementa­tion of the strategy will take approximat­ely 18 months to complete, according to the Health Ministry.

Funding for the strategy is in addition to a previously announced $10-million, five-year fund to renew and bolster the Therapeuti­cs Initiative. The organizati­on has provided education and independen­t reviews of the efficacy and value of prescripti­on drugs for more than two decades. It had its data access temporaril­y suspended in the fallout of the firings.

Malcolm Maclure, one of the workers fired in 2012, worked with the ministry on the strategy, Dix said.

Maclure, former co-director of research and evidence developmen­t in the ministry’s pharmaceut­ical services division, won his wrongful dismissal suit against the province in 2014.

“This is much more than just a response to the ombudspers­on’s report,” said Maclure, a professor and B.C. Academic Chair of Patient Safety in the department of anesthesio­logy, pharmacolo­gy and therapeuti­cs at UBC.

“To me, it’s a refreshing blueprint for concrete steps toward a culture in which decision-makers and researcher­s collaborat­e on developing evidence that is directly relevant to policy.”

The ombudspers­on’s report and recommenda­tions came out of the firings of eight Health Ministry workers in 2012.

The ministry said at the time that the firings happened because of allegation­s of improper contractin­g and misuse of health data.

One person, University of Victoria co-op student Roderick MacIsaac, committed suicide as a result of the firings.

The government has since given apologies and compensati­on to the people who were fired.

 ?? TIMES COLONIST ?? B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix aims to make the ministry “a forerunner again in evidence-based research and analysis.”
TIMES COLONIST B.C. Health Minister Adrian Dix aims to make the ministry “a forerunner again in evidence-based research and analysis.”

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