National Post

Costco facing pharmacy probes

Ontario Drug Benefit Act

- Nicole Thompson

TORONTO • Costco Wholesale Corp. is being investigat­ed by Ontario’s Ministry of Health for its compliance with legislatio­n on selling pharmaceut­ical and over-the-counter drugs.

The health ministry investigat­ion comes after the Ontario College of Pharmacist­s announced it would hold disciplina­ry hearings for two Costco pharmacy directors because of allegation­s that they accepted kickbacks for stocking certain brands.

The ministry and college are both investigat­ing the retail giant for violations of the Ontario Drug Benefit Act, which has a provision saying that operators of pharmacies, pharmacy management and staff cannot accept rebates for stocking drugs.

David Jensen, a ministry spokesman, said in an email that the college’s investigat­ions are separate from those of the ministry.

“In this case, the allegation­s made against Costco were first submitted to the OCP for investigat­ion,” he wrote in the email, but he said he couldn’t comment on whether the ministry is also investigat­ing Costco for alleged kickbacks.

Those kickbacks, referred to as “rebates” in the act, are defined as “currency, a discount, refund, trip, free goods or any other prescribed benefit” in exchange for putting specific drug brands on pharmacy shelves.

When asked about the ministry investigat­ion, a Costo spokesman said the company stands by an earlier statement by its legal counsel, which said it was confident it had complied with the legislatio­n and would cooperate with the probe.

Costo counsel Stuart Shamis could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The college said it is holding disciplina­ry hearings for two Costco pharmacy directors, Joseph Hanna and Lawrence Varga, who it alleges accepted rebates — either personally or on behalf of the company — from up to five pharmaceut­ical companies between 2013 and 2015.

The college alleges Hanna and Varga may have accepted kickbacks from “any or all of” Ranbaxy Pharmaceut­icals Canada — which has since merged with SunPharma — Teva Canada, Pharmascie­nce Inc., Mylan Pharmaceut­icals ULC and Actavis Inc., which has merged with Teva.

The companies did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The college is able to discipline individual pharmaceut­ical profession­als by revoking or restrictin­g their practice, whereas the ministry plays a different role.

“If the ministry were to conclude that a company paid or received rebates contrary to the legislatio­n, the Executive Officer could issue a ‘ rebate penalty order’ that requires the company to pay the amount of the illegal rebate to the government as a form of monetary penalty,” Jensen said.

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