Close X
Friday, November 15, 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

    Toronto Police Say They're Not Charging Hecklers Of On-Air Reporter Shauna Hunt

    Toronto Police Say They're Not Charging Hecklers Of On-Air Reporter Shauna Hunt
    In an email, police said they had met with Shauna Hunt, the CityNews reporter who confronted the hecklers on Sunday, and decided that charges were not appropriate.

    Toronto Police Say They're Not Charging Hecklers Of On-Air Reporter Shauna Hunt

    U2's The Edge Reassures Fans He's OK After Stage Fall In Vancouver

    U2's The Edge Reassures Fans He's OK After Stage Fall In Vancouver
    The Irish rocker is joking about his tumble on the band's Instagram account, where he posted a photo of his scraped arm with the message: "Didn't see the edge, I'm ok!!"

    U2's The Edge Reassures Fans He's OK After Stage Fall In Vancouver

    B.C. Securities Regulator Dismisses Fraud Allegations Against Jon Carnes

    B.C. Securities Regulator Dismisses Fraud Allegations Against Jon Carnes
    Jon Richard Carnes, who ran the "Alfred Little" financial blog, was accused in December 2013 of anonymously publishing a negative report about Silvercorp aimed at driving down its share price and then profiting from a short position he held.

    B.C. Securities Regulator Dismisses Fraud Allegations Against Jon Carnes

    RCMP Charged With Labour Violations In Relation To Deaths Of Moncton Officers

    RCMP Charged With Labour Violations In Relation To Deaths Of Moncton Officers
    MONCTON, N.B. — Nearly a year after three RCMP officers were murdered in Moncton by a lone gunman, the police force has been charged with four labour code violations in relation to the incident.

    RCMP Charged With Labour Violations In Relation To Deaths Of Moncton Officers

    California Cocaine Bust: Samer Karanouh, Canadian Man, Arrested After 159 Kilograms Seized

    Prosecutors say the Canadian driver, 44-year-old Samer Karanouh, has been arrested and is being held on $1 million bail in a county jail.

    California Cocaine Bust: Samer Karanouh, Canadian Man, Arrested After 159 Kilograms Seized

    Inquest Into Fatal Mill Blast Makes 33 Recommendations, Finds Deaths Accidental

    Inquest Into Fatal Mill Blast Makes 33 Recommendations, Finds Deaths Accidental
    A five-person jury made the recommendations after eight hours of deliberations on Thursday but ultimately concluded that the fatal 2012 blast at Lakeland Mills in Prince George, B.C., was accidental.

    Inquest Into Fatal Mill Blast Makes 33 Recommendations, Finds Deaths Accidental