Toronto Star

Pharma ‘blueprint’ due in spring

Key to national plan will be finding agreement among provinces

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY

SAINT ANDREWS, N.B.— With more than 100 different public drug plans available across Canada, including Ontario’s recently scaled-back OHIP+, one challenge for a countrywid­e pharmacare program will be finding agreement on which one will work best, Eric Hoskins says.

Hoskins, the former Ontario health minister who helped usher in OHIP+ and is now in charge of implementi­ng a national plan, spoke to Canada’s premiers on Friday about the issue, the same day his advisory council launched wider public consultati­ons online.

Hoskins said a “blueprint” with full details on the model and pricing will be ready next spring.

“There’s tremendous diversity” out there, he said, noting there are also more than 100,000 private drug plans in the country. A national pharmacare will offer “the ability to have consistenc­y across the country, so that a child in Ontario can expect to receive the same access to prescribed medication­s as a child in New Brunswick or in British Columbia or in the Northwest Territorie­s,” he told reporters after the breakfast meeting at the picturesqu­e Algonquin Resort.

“Changes are being made almost every day at the provincial and territoria­l level … (as they) try to improve access. We are trying to build consensus … so your access isn’t dependent on your postal code.”

Hoskins was joined by Linda Silas, president of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions. Eight of 13 premiers attended the Friday morning session; Doug Ford was not among them.

Hoskins said premiers who didn’t make it sent senior staff, and noted that he just last week met with Ontario Health Minister Christine Elliott.

The big question premiers have is about a national pharmacare program is how much it will cost and the cost-sharing arrangemen­t, he said.

Billions of dollars are wasted each year given the competing plans, he said, and a federal plan would see lower costs through efficienci­es like bulk purchasing.

Currently, Canada spends the most per capita on prescripti­ons after Switzerlan­d and the U.S. “We pay between 30 to 40 per cent higher than the other OECD (developed) countries pay,” Hoskins said.

Silas said the nurses first spoke to the premiers’ Council of the Federation, which represents all 13 provincial and territoria­l leaders in 2004, where a national pharmacare plan received unanimous support. That happened again last year at their meeting in Edmonton, she noted.

“They all support reforming the system,” she said. “We pay more for prescripti­on drugs in this country than we pay for doctors. One in four families cannot afford prescripti­on drugs.”

But the provinces do want to know “who is going to pay for the transforma­tion, and how is the pie going to be divided after that.” Hoskins agreed. “It’s very important to provinces and territorie­s that the federal commitment is there, it’s substantia­l, and that provinces and territorie­s have confidence in that cost-sharing and that federal contributi­on, and that federal contributi­on will be there today and also into the future.”

Prescripti­on drugs cost Canadians almost $30 billion a year, with all but about $4 billion covered by public or private plans.

Ontario’s OHIP+ plan was introduced by the former Liberal government to provide free prescripti­ons for residents up to the age of 25.

It came into place at the start of the year. An estimated one million prescripti­ons are filled each month.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Eric Hoskins and Linda Silas, of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, addressed the premiers on plans to implement a national pharmacare program.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Eric Hoskins and Linda Silas, of the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, addressed the premiers on plans to implement a national pharmacare program.

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