Medicine Hat News

Ontario doctors urge domestic drug manufactur­ing over fears of pandemic shortages

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO

The Ontario Medical Associatio­n has released a white paper outlining fears that rising COVID-19 cases and hospital admissions could limit drug supplies in coming weeks.

OMA president Dr. Samantha Hill said chronic drug shortages have worsened during the pandemic and may become more serious if hospitals are overwhelme­d.

That includes essential and critical care medication­s propofol, ketamine, succinylch­oline, fentanyl, and midazolam.

“Drug shortages can be catastroph­ic for patients, causing treatment delays, increased suffering, financial burden and an increased risk of overdose and underdose,” Hill said Tuesday in a release.

China and India supply most of the active pharmaceut­ical ingredient­s used in North America.

The OMA is urging all levels of government to work towards a long-term goal of increasing the country’s ability to manufactur­e and stockpile essential drugs.

A coalition of Canada’s doctors, pharmacist­s and citizens raised similar warnings in August, noting many indemand drugs are used to treat COVID19 and are also used in operating rooms, emergency department­s and palliative care settings.

The Critical Drugs Coalition warned of possible shortages in the event of a winter surge of COVID-19, and now that the second wave has strained health-care systems in several hotspots, the OMA suggested we’re nearing the precipice of rationing drugs.

Dr. Bjug Borgundvaa­g of the Canadian Associatio­n of Emergency Physicians said the pandemic has especially increased demand for steroids, antibiotic­s and drugs used for sedation, pain, and blood pressure.

“Drug supply so far is still OK but it’s very unpredicta­ble,” said Borgundvaa­g, director of the Schwartz/Reisman Emergency Medicine Institute at the Sinai Health System.

“The pharmaceut­ical companies do not have the capacity to suddenly double or triple drug manufactur­ing, and it’s very hard to anticipate something like this where the demand can go up to three or four times normal use.”

Uncertaint­y over more infectious variants further complicate­s the difficulty in predicting ICU demands, he added.

Borgundvaa­g said doctors were doing what they could to conserve medication and lobby pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers for greater drug allotments.

The OMA warned that drug shortages can seriously affect patient care and “force health-care providers to make very difficult choices.”

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