Edmonton Journal

Voluntary reporting of drug shortages criticized

Minister’s decision could put supply at risk, officials warned

- WILL CAMPBELL

TORONTO – The federal health minister opted to let drug makers voluntaril­y alert doctors and pharmacist­s of medication shortages despite concerns from her own department that the approach could put Canada’s drug supply at risk, documents show.

Records obtained by The Canadian Press indicate civil servants at Health Canada warned in February of last year a voluntary-notice system was “susceptibl­e to bad company behaviour” that could see firms neglect to report every shortage. An outline comparing voluntary versus mandatory approaches cautioned there would be no way to punish manufactur­ers who fail to report production gaps, which leave health practition­ers scrambling to get drugs to their patients.

Three weeks later Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq wrote to drug industry associatio­ns requesting they voluntaril­y release informatio­n on the increasing­ly common problem of medication shortages.

The letter to the Canadian Generic Pharmaceut­ical Associatio­n, Rx&D and BIOTECanad­a said that “regulatory alternativ­es” forcing notificati­on would be considered only if it was not possible for the industry to develop a voluntary plan.

Health Canada threw its support behind the resulting system — drawn up with input from health groups — in which drug makers pledged to post shortage informatio­n on a central website aimed at health profession­als and patients. The site, drugshorta­ges.ca, went live in April.

Voluntary reporting has been strongly opposed by the Canadian Cancer Society, the Canadian Anesthesio­logists’ Society and other health and patient groups. They insist the best way to ensure Canadians reliably get medication­s such as chemothera­py drugs and antibiotic­s is for Ottawa to require full disclosure from drug manufactur­ers on planned or unexpected gaps in production.

Aglukkaq spokesman Steve Outhouse said a voluntary system was chosen because it would take too long for Health Canada to bring forward regulation­s mandating companies disclose production gaps.

“The website that tracks drug shortages is up and running now because of adopting a voluntary approach. Regulation­s can take years to pass, and would mean delays in getting this informatio­n to Canadians,” Outhouse said.

He added that a mandatory system will be considered if manufactur­ers do not voluntaril­y comply.

The issue of drug shortages came to the forefront in February when a Sandoz Canada plant providing 90 per cent of generic injectable anesthetic­s and other medication­s commonly used by hospitals cut production due to a facility upgrade and subsequent fire.

Cancer Society senior analyst Lauren Dobson-Hughes said the advocacy group regularly hears from patients struggling to hunt down therapeuti­c medication­s that do not pop up on the drug-shortage website.

The Canadian Press obtained the internal Health Canada documents on drug shortages through the Access to Informatio­n Act.

Other records show a limited form of mandatory reporting was recommende­d in an exhaustive $25,000 report on drug shortages commission­ed by Health Canada — one of several times the department has probed the issue of shortage notices.

Documents show recommenda­tions in favour of a mandatory system date back to late 2010.

 ??  ?? Leona Aglukkaq
Leona Aglukkaq

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada