Lethbridge Herald

Barriers to mental health drugs on reserves

HEALTH CANADA PROGRAM REQUIRES TRYING OUTDATED MEDS FIRST: PSYCHIATRI­ST

- Joanna Smith THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Health Canada makes some onreserve patients jump through hoops or wait longer than non-indigenous Canadians to access prescripti­on drugs their doctors believe they need to treat mental illnesses, a psychiatri­st who has worked in First Nations communitie­s says.

Dr. Cornelia Wieman, who spent eight years as a community-based psychiatri­st at Six Nations of the Grand River Territory, a reserve near Brantford, Ont., said some prescripti­ons used to treat severe mental illnesses are not covered by Health Canada unless the patient has tried other antipsycho­tic agents first and experience­d no improvemen­t or suffered adverse reactions.

“I would often have to try the older versions of medication­s that according to the clinical practice guidelines were out of date, and I would have to have a patient fail on those older medication­s before they received funding for newer medication­s that were available on the market,” Wieman, a psychiatri­st at the Centre for Addictions and Mental Health in Toronto, told the parliament­ary committee studying the high suicide rate in indigenous communitie­s.

The issue is linked to Health Canada’s non-insured health benefits program which provides about $1 billion in annual coverage to eligible First Nations and Inuit people for a limited range of prescripti­on drugs, dental care, vision care, medical supplies and equipment, medical transporta­tion and mental health counsellin­g not covered by private or provincial or territoria­l health insurance plans.

The drugs benefit list includes four antipsycho­tic drugs that can be used only under limited conditions and require pre-approval from Health Canada. All four of them, however, are covered under general benefits in the Ontario drug plan.

Wieman said when it comes to remote indigenous communitie­s, their chances to see a psychiatri­st are often few and far between.

“That may be the one and only time I am in contact with that patient for, say, the next six months or a year or even more,” she said in an interview.

That means it could take even longer for the patient to finally get approved for the medication the doctor wanted to prescribe in the first place.

“I think there is this extra layer that First Nations and Inuit people, who are funded under non-insured health benefits, may have to go through in order to get the treatment that they require that would be equivalent to the standard of care that we provide in urban settings and that’s an inequality,” said Wieman, the first indigenous woman to become a psychiatri­st in Canada.

Yvonne Jones, the parliament­ary secretary to Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett, told The Canadian Press earlier this year that the Liberal government is aware of the issues with the non-insured health benefits program and is considerin­g reform.

A spokespers­on from Health Canada was unavailabl­e for comment.

Another problem, said Dr. Alika Lafontaine, president of the Indigenous Physicians Associatio­n of Canada, is that it takes the decision-making power away from clinicians.

“Fiscal restraint should never be an excuse for non-patient-centred care,” said Lafontaine.

Wieman said as frustratin­g as the obstacles to prescripti­on medication can be, she thinks the even bigger problem is how comparativ­ely little money goes to counsellin­g.

The 2014-15 report on the noninsured health benefits program shows that 41 per cent of the $1 billion spent that year went to pharmacy claims, compared to just 1.5 per cent to mental health..

In response to an order paper question, which is like an access-toinformat­ion request for MPs, Health Canada said that only two per cent of pharmacy claims are subject to preapprova­l.

Dr. Michael Kirlew, a family doctor who works in indigenous communitie­s surroundin­g Sioux Lookout, Ont., pointed out that some of the drugs requiring prior approval are commonly used to treat things like asthma or heart disease and that patients and their pharmacist­s have to deal with paperwork — and delays — that nonindigen­ous Canadians do not.

“The standard of health care that people receive is far inferior to what other people get and this is just another example of that,” Kirlew said.

I think there is this extra layer that First Nations and Inuit people, who are funded under non-insured health benefits, may have to go through in order to get the treatment that they require. – Dr. Cornelia Wieman –

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