Toronto Star

Canadians buying children’s pain meds faster than anyone

Top doctor urges against stockpilin­g as supply ramps up

- STEPHANIE LE V IT Z

Canadians are buying up infant and children’s pain medication­s at a faster rate than people in other countries, but just how long it will take to get store shelves consistent­ly and reliably stocked with the drugs remains unknown, Canada’s top health officials said Friday.

Frustrated parents have resorted to using expired drugs or turning to social media to source scarce bottles of products like liquid Tylenol or Advil for children and babies amid an ongoing shortage that began this spring.

Dr. Supriya Sharma, the chief medical adviser at Health Canada, said Friday the shortage began with arise in viral illness among children at a time of year where demand is typically low for medication­s used to treat fever and pain. In turn, drug makers weren’t making as much as they would during a regular cold or flu season.

As the issue got more attention, people started snapping up what products they could, leading to further pressures on the supply, she said at a news conference on the latest in COVID-19 vaccines.

“When you look at the buying in Canada compared to other countries that are very similar, that had similar patterns in terms of viral illnesses going up, Canada seems to be using or buying more of the product right now,” she said.

Sharma said she understand­s the anxiety of having a screaming child in the middle of the night with fever and pain, but urged people not to stockpile. Manufactur­ers are doubling or in some cases tripling production and more supply is coming, she said.

“We just need to be very careful about panic buying at this point in time,” she said.

Federal Health Minister JeanYves Duclos said Friday he’s been on the phone with Canada’s leading manufactur­ers, impressing upon them how the shortages impact not just families but the health-care system as a whole and urging them to find a way around the problem.

When asked, he did not know when the shortage would end.

“They have assured me that the supply will keep increasing over the next few weeks and months to restock the inventory that has been low,” he said.

“And, obviously, to prepare for the increased demand that we are going to continue to see over the next few weeks and months as COVID-19, flu and other viruses impact more the health of our children.”

Duclos said he’s also reminded the manufactur­ers there are emergency regulation­s that could be used if it would help them get access to ingredient­s or more quickly import supplies, but he said companies have told him they don’t need them for now.

On Johnson and Johnson’s website for Tylenol products, the company says its manufactur­ing plant is running 24 hours a day, seven days a week and products are shipping daily across the country.

The company did not immediatel­y return a request for more informatio­n Friday from the Star.

The House of Commons health committee passed a motion Thursday suggesting one possible solution is for Canada to allow the importatio­n of foreign language labelled products, as has been done with past medication shortages.

Sharma said that avenue is open to producers and is being discussed.

In a statement Friday morning, Health Canada said while the government is working to get medicines to all, children’s hospitals are a “particular area of focus” for replenishm­ent.

Children’s hospitals across Ontario are currently struggling under the weight of unpreceden­ted demand.

Alex Munter, the head of the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, told members of Parliament recently that September was the busiest month on record in the five decades since the hospital opened and wait times were as long as 32 hours, driven in part by a surge in respirator­y illnesses.

 ?? J USTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS F I L E PHOTO ?? Dr. Supriya Sharma, chief medical adviser for Health Canada, said she understand­s parents’ anxiety, but we need to be very careful about panic buying.
J USTIN TANG THE CANADIAN PRESS F I L E PHOTO Dr. Supriya Sharma, chief medical adviser for Health Canada, said she understand­s parents’ anxiety, but we need to be very careful about panic buying.

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