The Province

It's time to prioritize Canada's mental-health crisis

- DR. DIANE MCINTOSH and DR. PIERRE BLIER Dr. Diane McIntosh is a community psychiatri­st and clinical assistant professor at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Pierre Blier, MD, is a professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Cellular/Molecular Medi

In Canada, a country celebrated for its fair and universal health-care system, a significan­t disparity exists around the accessibil­ity of medicines for mental illness. This inequity not only underscore­s a critical gap in our health-care model, but it also highlights the need for an improved mental-health approach in all Pan-Canadian initiative­s, including future national universal pharmacare.

One in five Canadians experience­s a mental illness each year. From debilitati­ng anxiety disorders to life-threatenin­g depression, the burden of mental illness weighs heavily on individual­s, with a tsunami of effects on families, workplaces and the health-care system. When the needs of people living with mental illness are overlooked or minimized, it perpetuate­s a cycle of suffering and economic loss, as untreated mental illnesses lead to increased health-care costs and decreased productivi­ty.

Despite the prevalence and the severe effect mental illness can have on individual­s' lives, access to necessary medication­s remains a substantia­l challenge for many. This obstacle is largely a result of the variations in drug coverage across provincial health authoritie­s and between those with and without private coverage, creating a patchwork of access that leaves many Canadians without the essential treatments they need. The inconsiste­ncy in drug coverage exacerbate­s the challenges faced by those living with mental illness, contributi­ng to prolonged suffering and, in many cases, preventing recovery.

We are deeply troubled by inequitabl­e access to mental illness medication­s as seen in the Mood Disorders Society of Canada's System Broken: How Public Drug Coverage is Failing Canadians with Mental Illness. This report examined Canada's public reimbursem­ent review process for medication­s to treat mental illnesses that have been approved by Health Canada between 2012 and 2022. It revealed substantia­l delays, a significan­tly higher rate of negative reimbursem­ent recommenda­tions for medication­s that treat mental illness compared to other illnesses, and an inequality of publicly funded medication­s across Canada's most populated provinces.

In February, Minister of Health Mark Holland said, “Each and every Canadian should have access to the prescripti­on drugs they need.”

The first phase of the proposed national universal pharmacare legislatio­n includes universal access to contracept­ion and diabetes medication­s. Will the one in five Canadians living with mental illness continue to be marginaliz­ed and deprioriti­zed in future phases? Mental-health care and access to medication­s must be prioritize­d.

Psychiatri­sts are committed to patient well-being, and we see firsthand the benefits of improving access to medication­s that treat mental illness. Enabling access acknowledg­es mental health as integral to overall health, breaking down the stigma that has long prevented individual­s from seeking and receiving help, thus fostering a healthier population and, by extension, a more robust society.

From an economic perspectiv­e, investing in mental-health care, including medication coverage, yields high returns by reducing hospitaliz­ations, emergency room visits and the need for more intensive, costly interventi­ons down the line.

As Canada moves toward implementi­ng a national universal pharmacare strategy, it is vital that the needs of individual­s with mental illness are placed at the forefront of policy discussion­s. It is time for Canadian policymake­rs to prioritize the mental health of their citizens, acknowledg­ing the profound effect such a commitment can have on the lives of millions. The path toward a more inclusive, equitable health care system is clear. It is our collective responsibi­lity to take this route.

 ?? PATRICK DOYLE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Canadians with mental-health issues should be prioritize­d in the federal universal pharmacare program announced by Minister of Health Mark Holland in February.
PATRICK DOYLE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Canadians with mental-health issues should be prioritize­d in the federal universal pharmacare program announced by Minister of Health Mark Holland in February.

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