Lethbridge Herald

Liberals take first step toward pharmacare

- Laura Osman

The Liberals took their first major step toward national pharmacare Thursday as the health minister tabled a bill that paves the way for a universal drug program and secures NDP support in the House of Commons.

But Health Minister Mark Holland made clear there is still a long way to go before all drugs in Canada are covered under a federal program.

The bill allows the government to negotiate with provinces and territorie­s to cover birth control, along with diabetes drugs and supplies, for anyone with a health card.

Holland said the cost is likely to be in the realm of $1.5 billion, but he said that estimate is very likely to change over the course of his talks with provinces.

There will be some money set aside in the Liberals’ spring budget, Holland said, but the full cost of the program won’t be reflected until 2025.

“This is a proof-of-concept opportunit­y to try (providing) two drugs on a universal, single-payer model,” Holland said at a press conference Thursday.

“We’re going to have an opportunit­y to evaluate the effectiven­ess of that model.”

He said he believes the government will be able to show significan­t cost savings in fairly short order.

Making sure contracept­ion and diabetes medication­s are covered is really important, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday at a press conference in Thunder Bay.

“We know there’s far too many people who find themselves in worse and worse situations because they can’t quite afford to take the medication­s they need.”

In addition to testing the waters on universal coverage, the bill also fulfils a promise made to the New Democrats, who touted the legislatio­n Thursday as the fulfilment of a long-held dream.

“This is historic. This is the dream of our party since the conception of our party,” NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Thursday morning.

“It is happening not by coincidenc­e, it is happening because New Democrats fought and we forced the government to do this.”

Pharmacare is a central pillar of the political pact between the two parties, which has the NDP helping the Liberals stave off an election in exchange for progress on a list of shared priorities.

Its future had seemed uncertain amid a months-long stalemate over the wording of the legislatio­n and the number of drugs they planned to launch with.

The NDP announced they clinched the negotiatio­ns late last week, in the lead-up to a negotiated March 1 deadline to table a bill.

Health critic Don Davies, who led the negotiatio­ns for the New Democrats, said the final pieces were put in place over the weekend.

“The Liberals fought us every step of the way. They resisted, they delayed, they opposed, but New Democrats persisted,” said Davies.

The legislatio­n makes reference to a single-payer, universal model — something Davies said he insisted on.

And it includes universal coverage as a binding principle that must guide the implementa­tion of a future pharmacare program.

Holland, however, said the legislatio­n merely requires the government to “consider” those elements when designing the full drug plan.

Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre spoke to the media in the foyer of the House of Commons Thursday, but walked away when reporters asked him for his position on the government’s pharmacare plans.

As it stands, Canada is the only country in the world with a universal health-care system that does not also have universal coverage for prescripti­on drugs outside of hospitals.

In December, the NDP and Liberals agreed to push back the original timeline, which would’ve seen legislatio­n fully passed by the end of last year.

The reticence on the Liberals’ part largely came down to cost.

A full fledged pharmacare program would cost the government nearly $40 billion a year by the time it is fully up and running, the parliament­ary budget officer estimates.

Singh threatened to pull out of the deal if the March 1 deadline wasn’t met with legislatio­n that earned his approval, though he was open about a desire to keep the deal alive and see a pharmacare bill debated in the Commons.

The bill calls for the minister to put together a committee of experts to make recommenda­tions about how to pay for a national, universal, single-payer plan within 30 days of the act receiving royal assent.

Alberta and Quebec have already said they want to opt out of the program and would rather put the money toward their existing drug plans.

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