Canadians support it, public health demands it, now policy makers must deliver it
Canada’s universal healthcare system, often referred to as Medicare, provides universal, public insurance for medically necessary physicians’ services and hospital care, including inpatient prescription drugs.1 Prescriptions filled outside hospitals are not part of this system, forcing Canadians to rely on an incomplete and uncoordinated patchwork of public and private drug plans.2 That might soon change. Canada’s federal government is debating a bill that would take the first step towards universal, public coverage of prescription drugs, legislation that has been long called for and often promised by government.3 But implementation of a “national pharmacare” system will face formidable opposition.
Presently, Canada’s federal government, 10 provincial governments, and three territorial governments offer more than 100 different public drug plans for population subgroups that vary across the c
Philippine Canadian Inquirer Canada’s misguided changes to drug regulation could fast-track unproven medications and divert funds from other health needs News