Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Call growing louder for national prescription drug plan in Canada

Lee-Anne Goodman THE CANADIAN PRESS, 05 Oct, 2014 11:37 AM

    OTTAWA - It's a buzzword in the medical community, although one that hasn't quite caught fire yet with Canadians at large: pharmacare, a national program that would see prescription drugs covered through a publicly funded system rather than out of pocket.

    Many doctors are clamouring for it. Canadians dream of it when faced with sky-high drug costs as they fight cancer, diabetes, heart disease and other illnesses. Even private insurers aren't entirely opposed.

    And now politicians are starting to take up the cause. The federal NDP is calling for national pharmacare, while Ontario's new health minister has emerged one of its most enthusiastic cheerleaders as he urges a federal strategy.

    "I can't tell you how many times I'd have to go into the sample drawer, because I knew if I gave a prescription to someone, they weren't going to fill it because they couldn't afford it," Eric Hoskins, who's also a physician, said in a recent interview.

    A successful public health-care system isn't just about access to a family doctor or an MRI, Hoskins says.

    "It's also about being able to access the drugs, and if there's a barrier to that, we're not meeting that standard of a truly public health-care system .... Pharmacare speaks to Canadian values of fairness and equity and access."

    Canada, with its aging population, is the only industrialized nation with universal health insurance but no public coverage of prescription drug costs.

    An estimated one in 10 Canadians can't fill prescriptions because of the expense. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development has also found that Canada has the second highest per capita spending on prescription drugs in the OECD.

    That's largely because there's no national standard for drug coverage or drug purchasing in Canada. The patchwork of provincial and territorial health-care systems means Canadians with life-threatening illnesses are confronted with costs that can vary wildly from province to province.

    Even if ailing Canadians have private drug coverage, their insurers may refuse to reimburse them if the medications aren't considered to be offering value for money. Many medications, especially so-called orphan drugs that are prescribed for rare illnesses, are exceedingly expensive in Canada.

    "On pricing of medications, we pay way too much in Canada, especially for generic drugs — both public plans and private plans are paying prices that are far too high because of the way we have established how we pay for the drugs," says Danielle Martin, a physician and vice-president of Women's College Hospital in Toronto.

    Canada pays generic companies about 18 per cent of the price of the brand-name drugs, whereas in other countries, generic companies are asked to bid on contracts, she says.

    "And it's amazing how the discounts start coming in. Other countries and health systems get staggeringly lower prices than we do."

    Canada also fails to buy drugs in bulk, the way the other OECD countries do — although the provinces and territories have started to work together on bulk purchasing, Martin says.

    "Everybody knows if you buy your toilet paper in those packages of 40 rolls, you pay less per roll than if you go to the corner store and buy two rolls at a time — it works the same with medications," she said.

    But in Canada, there are dozens of different purchasers for the same drugs — private employer plans, public plans and hospitals among them.

    "If we could pool our purchasing power, and buy drugs in bulk for everyone, again we could negotiate much lower prices — so much lower that there are very solid economic estimates that suggest we could buy .... a number of drugs used for chronic diseases for every Canadian who needs them for no more money than we're currently spending."

    A recently released study commissioned by the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions determined there are potential savings of up to $11.4 billion a year for Canadian taxpayers via pharmacare due to decreased drugs costs and reduced administration fees.

    Pharmacare would also improve access to an array of prescription drugs for aging Canadians, the study found.

    Federal Health Minister Rona Ambrose didn't commit to a national strategy last week when pharmacare was raised as she met with her provincial and territorial counterparts in Banff.

    "It did come up, and we discussed it quite a bit in the scope of looking at how we can work together to purchase drugs across the country," she said as the conference wrapped up.

    "The provinces and territories have come together on bulk purchasing and have saved Canadian taxpayers literally hundreds of millions of dollars .... So that's the beginning of the conversation."

    Stephen Frank, vice-president of policy development and health for the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association, says private insurers are stung by high drug prices too. About 60 per cent of Canadians have private drug coverage, most through their employers.

    "We do need a strategy around improving access to prescription drugs and also lowering costs for prescription drugs; we're very supportive of a national strategy on bulk purchasing, as well," he said.

    "The issue for us, though, is that what the provinces have done to date is positive for the public plans across Canada, but they have not included employers in those savings. Private insurers are ready to engage in these dialogues and to do our part to improve things; we just need to be included in the discussion."

    Frank adds his organization put in place a drug-purchasing pool for private plans last year, allowing insurers to reimburse some massive claims.

    "We paid over 4,000 claims last that exceeded $25,000 a year; the highest was for over $1.2 million; there were dozens over hundreds of thousands," he said.

    "So it's a completely new world and everyone is struggling with how to deal with it ... the more you work together, the more you can spread those costs and manage it. A national strategy serves us all."

    Martin says she's more optimistic than ever that a pharmacare system is afoot.

    "All of the signs are really positive. It's one of those situations where the case has been so strong for so long, but somehow there's been a political shift that is changing the conversation."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sobbing Kelowna Driver Expresses Remorse For High Speed Crash That Killed Mother Of Two

    Sobbing Kelowna Driver Expresses Remorse For High Speed Crash That Killed Mother Of Two
    KELOWNA, B.C. - A Kelowna, B.C., man has been sentenced to 15 months in jail, one year probation and banned from driving for two years for causing a fatal crash in neighbouring West Kelowna.

    Sobbing Kelowna Driver Expresses Remorse For High Speed Crash That Killed Mother Of Two

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater
    Christopher Cloutier was camping with friends in Nopiming Provincial Park in southeastern Manitoba when they got separated.

    Lost In Manitoba Wilderness For 3 Days, Man Lived On All-Dressed Chips, Rainwater

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator
    VANCOUVER - Teachers and the B.C. government's negotiator are expected to bring their bargaining committees to discussions with veteran mediator Vince Ready today.

    B.C. Teachers And Employer Add Bargaining Committees To Meeting With Mediator

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor
    MERRITT, B.C. - The Mounties say a dashboard camera from a tractor-trailer captured a tour bus rollover that injured dozens of people on a B.C. highway and it appears speed is not a factor.

    B.C. Tour Bus Crash: RCMP Say They Have Footage; Speed Not Factor

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014
    The normally green David Lam Park in Vancouver’s Yaletown district turned into a sea of white for the third annual Vancouver Dîner en Blanc outdoor dining phenomenon last week. 

    Diner en Blanc Vancouver 2014

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003
    NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. - Human remains found in the mountains near North Vancouver have been identified as those of a 20-year-old Ontario man who went missing more than a decade ago while visiting his grandmother in British Columbia.

    Remains found in B.C. matched to 20-year-old Ontario man missing since 2003