Lethbridge Herald

Pharmacare comes with questions

NATIONAL PHARMACARE ‘STRATEGY’ TO PRESERVE EXISTING SYSTEM: MORNEAU

- Andy Blatchford THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Finance Minister Bill Morneau says the national pharmacare committee assembled this week will preserve the best parts of Canada’s existing drug plans, rather than abandon them in pursuit of a new, country-wide universal program.

Speaking a day after tabling his third budget, Morneau said Wednesday that the new pharmacare advisory council will explore a strategy on how to close gaps in the current patchwork to ensure all Canadians have access to the medication­s they need.

“We need to consider how we can best make use of our existing system — which, after all, for most people in this room, is probably working — but recognize that there are very significan­t gaps that we need to deal with,” Morneau told the Economic Club of Canada in Ottawa.

“We recognize that we need a strategy to deal with the fact that not everyone has access and we need to do it in a way that’s responsibl­e, that deals with the gaps, but doesn’t throw out the system that we currently have.”

The advisory group, led by former Ontario health minister Eric Hoskins, was officially announced in Morneau’s budget Tuesday. Hoskins will likely be supportive of maintainin­g existing systems — he was behind the introducti­on of an Ontario pharmacare plan this year that covers 4,400 medication­s for people under 25.

His new committee will work with provinces, territorie­s and Indigenous groups.

A national pharmacare plan is seen as a major undertakin­g with a hefty price tag. Last fall, the parliament­ary budget watchdog warned it could cost $19 billion a year.

While on stage Wednesday, Morneau noted that Ottawa wants to proceed in a fiscally responsibl­e way. He made a point of saying he sees a very big difference between a national pharmacare “strategy” and a “plan.”

Following his appearance, he told a news conference that “there are parts of the system that are working well, there are parts of the system that really aren’t working well — we need to consider both those parts.”

Morneau’s comments that some of the existing systems could remain in place drew condemnati­on from the Canadian Health Coalition, which issued a news release Wednesday accusing the minister of backing away from a universal public drug plan.

“This is a cruel sleight-of-hand,” James Hutt, the group’s interim national director for policy and advocacy, said in a statement.

“Millions of Canadians have been waiting decades for life-saving medication­s and were ecstatic (with) the Liberals’ announceme­nt yesterday. Now, today they clarify that the Liberals want only partial drug coverage — not for everyone.”

The coalition said Canada is the only country with a public health-care system that lacks a national public drug plan for everyone.

Hoskins has until the spring of next year to deliver his final report, setting the stage for the Liberals to make pharmacare a centrepiec­e of the party’s 2019 election campaign and possibly expropriat­e a central plank of NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh’s platform.

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