Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Saskatoon Children With Rare Disease To Have $500,000 Drug Covered By Province

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Nov, 2015 10:59 AM
  • Saskatoon Children With Rare Disease To Have $500,000 Drug Covered By Province
REGINA — A Saskatoon father says it is "awesome" the provincial government has agreed to pay for an proven and costly drug treatment for his three children, who have a rare and often fatal blood disease.
 
Muhammed Akhter says when he got the phone call from the health minister he had to ask the woman on the line three times to repeat what she was saying.
 
He calls it "life-changing news."
 
Akhter's three children, ages 8, 10 and 12, suffer from Morquio Syndrome, a rare disease that causes problems with bone development and produces other complications.
 
The disease has already put two of Akhter's children into wheelchairs.
 
A drug called Vimizim, which costs $500,000 per child per year, is not a cure, although studies indicate it is effective in slowing down the disease in children under five.
 
Originally, the province denied coverage for the drug, citing consultations with an outside doctor that found the medication might not prove effective for the children who are older than five.
 
The decision was reversed this week after the province got more input from other doctors. The ministry agreed to cover Vimizim treatments on a trial basis for one year.
 
Akhter said he's hopeful the treatments will help his children have a more normal quality of life.
 
"Although they're smiling all the time, having this news, they're (even) happier now," he said.
 
Health Minister Dustin Duncan has said any further decision to provide coverage for Vimizim will be made on a case-by-case basis, and will rely on out-of-province specialist recommendations.

MORE National ARTICLES

Watch: Chilling Video Reveals Suspects Preparing For Thwarted Richmond Home Invasion

Watch: Chilling Video Reveals Suspects Preparing For Thwarted Richmond Home Invasion
Mounties say the video was taken Oct. 6,  outside a north Richmond home, as four men surrounded the house shortly before midnight.

Watch: Chilling Video Reveals Suspects Preparing For Thwarted Richmond Home Invasion

Indo-Canadian Cabbie Amritpal Singh Surrenders In Toronto, Booked For Molesting Woman

Indo-Canadian Cabbie Amritpal Singh Surrenders In Toronto, Booked For Molesting Woman
Toronto police on Monday charged Amritpal Singh, 24, with forcible confinement and sexual assault in a September 15 case

Indo-Canadian Cabbie Amritpal Singh Surrenders In Toronto, Booked For Molesting Woman

Saskatchewan Town Tisdale Votes To Change 'Land Of Rape And Honey' Slogan

Saskatchewan Town Tisdale Votes To Change 'Land Of Rape And Honey' Slogan
Tisdale has used the slogan for nearly 60 years, but a survey found a majority of the 3,200 residents wanted to drop the catchphrase.

Saskatchewan Town Tisdale Votes To Change 'Land Of Rape And Honey' Slogan

Shelly Chartier, Manitoba Woman Handed 18 Months Jail Sentence For Impersonating Athlete Online

Shelly Chartier pleaded guilty in August to seven counts of fraud and other offences for a "catfishing" scheme that entangled the athlete in a child porn investigation and led to a raid of his home in 2012.

Shelly Chartier, Manitoba Woman Handed 18 Months Jail Sentence For Impersonating Athlete Online

Sergeant-At-Arms Patrick Shaw Says Leaking At Saskatchewan Legislature Disgraceful

Sergeant-At-Arms Patrick Shaw Says Leaking At Saskatchewan Legislature Disgraceful
Patrick Shaw, who is also head of security at the Saskatchewan legislature, says party bus companies have been allowing people to pee on the building late at night.

Sergeant-At-Arms Patrick Shaw Says Leaking At Saskatchewan Legislature Disgraceful

Environment Canada Suspends Montreal's Plan To Dump Raw Sewage Into St. Lawrence

Environment Canada Suspends Montreal's Plan To Dump Raw Sewage Into St. Lawrence
The federal government has ordered a halt to Montreal's controversial plan to dump eight billion litres of raw sewage into the St. Lawrence River until further scientific analysis can be done.

Environment Canada Suspends Montreal's Plan To Dump Raw Sewage Into St. Lawrence