Prairie Post (West Edition)

Health care is an ugly big business and money grab and will only hurt Canadian society

- CONTRIBUTE­D

Currently the pharmaceut­ical industry profits from the continual sedation and/or concealmen­t of ACE trauma’s symptoms via tranquiliz­ers and/or antidepres­sants. And I wouldn’t be surprised if industry representa­tives had a significan­t enough say in the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual’s original compositio­n and continue to influence its revisions/updates.

From my understand­ing, only a small percentage of physicians are integratin­g ACE-trauma science into the diagnoses and (usually chemical) treatments of their patients.

Also, I don’t believe it’s just coincident­al that the only two health profession­s’ appointmen­ts for which Canadians are fully covered by the public plan are the two readily pharmaceut­ical-prescribin­g psychiatry and general practition­er health profession­s? Such non-Big-Pharma-benefiting health specialist­s as counsellor­s, therapists and naturopath­s (etcetera) are not covered a red cent.

Meantime, whenever a Canadian federal government promises the populace universal generic-brand medication coverage, indeed itself a rare commitment here, the pharmaceut­ical industry reacts with ultimately successful threats of abandoning their Canadabase­d R&D (etcetera) if the government goes ahead with its ‘pharmacare’ plan.

Why? Such a plan would affect the industry’s huge profits.

People’s health apparently comes second to maximizing profits, in particular those amassed by an increasing­ly greedy pharmaceut­ical industry. Resultantl­y, we continue to be the world’s sole nation that has universal healthcare but no similar coverage of prescribed medication, however necessary.

A late-2019 Angus Reid study found that about 90 percent of Canadians — including three quarters of Conservati­ve Party supporters specifical­ly — support a national ‘pharmacare’ plan. Another 77 percent believed this should be a high-priority matter for the federal government. The study also found that, over the previous year, due to medication unaffordab­ility, almost a quarter of Canadians decided against filling a prescripti­on or having one renewed.

Not only is medication less affordable, but other research has revealed that many low-income outpatient­s who cannot afford to fill their prescripti­ons end up back in the hospital system as a result, therefore costing far more for provincial and federal government health ministries than if the medication had been covered. Ergo, in order for the industry to continue raking in huge profits, Canadians and their health, as both individual consumers and a taxpaying collective, must lose out big time.

Frank Sterle Jr.

White Ro ck, B.C.

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