The Sun (Malaysia)

Canada to make contracept­ion for women free

-

Canada will cover the full cost of contracept­ion for women, the government said on Saturday as it highlighte­d the first part of a major health care reform.

The government will pay for the most widely used methods to avoid pregnancy, such as IUDs, contracept­ive pills, hormonal implants or the day after pill, for the nine million Canadian women of reproducti­ve age, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said at a press conference in a pharmacy in Toronto.

“Women should be free to choose the contracept­ives they need without cost getting in the way. So, we’re making contracept­ives free,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said.

This announceme­nt fleshes out the first part of a bill unveiled in February that, once completed, would mark the biggest expansion of Canada’s publicly funded health care system in decades.

This new regime will also cover the cost of diabetes medication for some 3.7 million Canadians.

The cost of the new system and timing of the launch have not been announced.

More drugs will be added to the programme as it is rolled out.

An Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t report using 2021 data found Canada spends more per capita on medication­s than all but three member countries – Japan, Germany and the US.

The government must now win the approval of Canada’s provinces, which actually administer health care, for this new system. Alberta and Quebec have said they would opt out.

The pharmacare plan follows protracted negotiatio­ns between Trudeau’s Liberal minority government and a small leftist faction in parliament.

The New Democratic Party agreed to prop up the Liberals until the fall of 2025, on condition that the government launch the drug programme.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia