Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Health Ministers Discuss National Pharmacare Program To Pay For Prescription Drugs

The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2015 10:19 AM
    TORONTO — The need for a national pharmacare program to pay the cost of prescription drugs is the focus of a meeting of eight of Canada's provincial and territorial health ministers in Toronto today.
     
    Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins, who is a physician, is a strong advocate for a universal pharmacare program to operate alongside the universal health-care system.
     
    Hoskins says a public health-care system isn't just about access to a family doctor or an MRI, but must also ensure patients can access medications that some simply cannot afford.
     
    His counterparts from British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, and the Northwest Territories are meeting with academics and experts on pharmacare, with some of the ministers attending by phone.
     
    The federal New Democrats support a national pharmacare program, which one study estimated could save taxpayers $11 billion a year by using bulk purchasing power to reduce drug costs and administration fees.
     
    Canada is the only industrialized country with universal health insurance that does not offer universal prescription drug coverage.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alleged Case Of Road Rage Prompts Criminal Charges Against 37-Year-Old man On Vancouver Island: RCMP

      COMOX, B.C. — Mounties on Vancouver Island have arrested a 37-year-old man over what they say is an apparent case of road rage.

    Alleged Case Of Road Rage Prompts Criminal Charges Against 37-Year-Old man On Vancouver Island: RCMP

    Expert Drops Out Of 'Biased' Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline Review

    Expert Drops Out Of 'Biased' Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline Review
    Robyn Allan, former CEO of the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia, says she is withdrawing as an expert intervener because the panel is biased and the outcome is predetermined.

    Expert Drops Out Of 'Biased' Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline Review

    University Of B.C. Gives 95-year-old Practising Lawyer Honorary Doctorate

    University Of B.C. Gives 95-year-old Practising Lawyer Honorary Doctorate
    VANCOUVER — Sixty-four years after she walked across the stage to collect her law degree, Constance Isherwood was back at the University of British Columbia for yet another ceremony.

    University Of B.C. Gives 95-year-old Practising Lawyer Honorary Doctorate

    Victoria Man Wants Pit-Bull Cross That Mauled His Small Dog Destroyed

    Victoria Man Wants Pit-Bull Cross That Mauled His Small Dog Destroyed
    Paul Johnston says his three-year-old Maltese-poodle cross named Cooper was attacked during a hiking trip northwest of the city.

    Victoria Man Wants Pit-Bull Cross That Mauled His Small Dog Destroyed

    B.C., Petronas Sign Deal Toward Proposed LNG Project In Province's Northwest

    B.C., Petronas Sign Deal Toward Proposed LNG Project In Province's Northwest
    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government and Malaysian energy giant Petronas have signed an agreement towards a $36-billion liquefied natural gas project near Prince Rupert.

    B.C., Petronas Sign Deal Toward Proposed LNG Project In Province's Northwest

    Canadians Dealing With Debt Prudently Despite Record Levels: Fraser Institute

    Canadians Dealing With Debt Prudently Despite Record Levels: Fraser Institute
    OTTAWA — Canadians are carrying record amounts of debt, but they are managing their finances prudently, according to a report by the Fraser Institute.

    Canadians Dealing With Debt Prudently Despite Record Levels: Fraser Institute