:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 116 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health.
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Please take note of the following preventive measures that are in place to protect the health and safety of all participants, including the interpreters: Please use only the black approved earpiece. The former grey earpieces must no longer be used. Please keep your earpiece away from all microphones at all times. When you're not using your earpiece, place it face down on the sticker on the table for this purpose. Thank you for your co-operation.
Pursuant to the order of reference adopted by the House of Commons last night, the committee is commencing its study of Bill , an act respecting pharmacare.
As was indicated in the memo that was sent out this morning, I'd like to remind members that amendments to Bill must be submitted to the clerk of the committee by 4 p.m. Eastern Time tomorrow, Friday, May 24, 2024.
It's important for members to note that pursuant to the order adopted by the House yesterday, the 4 p.m. deadline to submit amendments is firm. This means that any amendments submitted to the clerk after the deadline and any amendments moved from the floor during clause-by-clause consideration of the bill will not be considered by the committee.
Colleagues, we also have a budget for the study of Bill that I propose to present to you after we hear from all the witnesses this evening.
Without further ado, I'd like to now welcome our first panel of witnesses.
We have with us the Honourable Mark Holland, Minister of Health. He's accompanied by officials from the Department of Health. They are Michelle Boudreau, associate assistant deputy minister, strategic policy branch, and Daniel MacDonald, director general, office of pharmaceutical management strategies, strategic policy branch.
Minister Holland will be with us for an hour, and the officials will stay on until five o'clock.
Without further ado, welcome to the committee, Minister. You can now go ahead with your opening statement for the next five minutes.
:
Thank you so much, Mr. Chair.
It's such a pleasure to be here with the committee.
[Translation]
I am extremely grateful for the work the committee is doing on this important issue. It is essential that Canadians have access to the medication they need. It's a fundamental aspect of our health care system.
First of all, I'd like to thank the member for for his work.
[English]
I think it's an excellent example of how, when we work together as parliamentarians and seek solutions to the difficult issues that are in front of us, we can find solutions.
I want to also thank the now-health critic, the member for New Westminster—Burnaby and the House leader. Both as a House leader and as a health minister, I've had a chance to work with him in his different roles. I thank him for his work.
Of course, within our own caucus, I want to thank the member for Brampton South, who has really been extraordinary in her advocacy.
Of course, there are so many that I could use the full five minutes. However, I'm going to focus today on drugs. We could talk about all the things we're doing on health, but let's talk specifically about medication.
There are 1.1 million Canadians who aren't insured and about one in five who are under-insured. In a very practical sense, that means they don't have access to the medicine they need.
Today in question period, Mr. Chair, we were talking about your home province of P.E.I. and the difference it makes for the folks—for islanders—to be able to afford their medication and how critical that is, not just as a function of affordability but also as a matter of dignity and a matter of prevention.
Let's just take diabetes in the first example. Some folks ask, “Why diabetes?” This is so fundamental to stopping so many other chronic diseases and illnesses.
Do you know that about 70% of chronic diseases and illnesses are preventable? We're taking historic action to deal with the crisis in primary care and to make sure people have access to the doctors and nurses they need.
Making sure we're upstream so that somebody doesn't get sick in the first place is so critically important. When somebody has access to the diabetes medication they need, what does that mean? It means they don't wind up with heart disease or a stroke. They don't wind up with the loss of a limb, or dying. That's fundamentally important as a matter of social justice.
It also is fundamentally important as a matter of savings. We know that about 25% of folks with diabetes right now are saying that cost is a major factor for them in sticking to a regime of taking the medication they need.
You can focus on problems and critiques or you can focus on solutions. That's what this bill does. It says we'll work with provinces and territories on creating a baseline. When we're looking at that formulary, that's a minimum, not a maximum. Let's be very clear that everything we're doing here is additive. It's working with provinces. Nobody is going to lose coverage. This is all about expanding coverage and making sure that patients have choice and that they get the medication they need.
Let's talk about sexual health as well for a second.
We need to have a conversation in this country around sexual and reproductive health, to be able to say that every woman in every part of this country has the ability to choose the reproductive medicines they need to take control of their reproductive and sexual health and futures. To me, that is fundamental. I hope it sparks a general conversation about sexual health in this country and about sex being something that is affirming and makes you grow stronger, not something that's used as a tool for shame and pain and hurt.
As I look at this plan, as I was saying today in the House, there are people who say that it's too much to hope for: Don't hope for dental care. Don't hope for pharmacare. Just give up. Go away.
Well, they said that about dental care, and yesterday at noon we crossed the point of 100,000 seniors getting dental care. To put that in perspective, I was in Vanier talking to a denturist about a patient who for 41 years had the same set of dentures. Next week she'll be getting a new pair of dentures for the first time. That means she won't be crushing food in her mouth with plastic plates. She will be afforded the dignity of teeth in her mouth. This is real stuff that we're doing.
There are people right now waiting for the contraceptives they need for their sexual and reproductive health. They're waiting for the diabetes medication they need. I was talking to Sarah in a diabetes clinic here about what that will mean for people avoiding illness, and about not seeing patients who are reusing syringes and getting blood-borne diseases because they don't have access.
This opens the door for us to negotiate with provinces to make sure that everybody gets that coverage. It will have a huge impact in terms of dignity, social justice, prevention and cost avoidance. I am exceptionally excited to talk about it today.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Let's start with the first point: You have no idea what you're talking about.
The second point is this: Canadians wait the longest time in OECD countries for approval of medications, which you clearly have no clue about. We're back to that again, sadly. The last time you were here, you had no clue and you remain clueless, obviously.
The percentage of new medications available in Canada is 44% of 460 medications. What that means is this: Despite the fact that you want to go out and announce things that are untrue and not even happening, the system you have—the regulatory system that you, sir, have control over—is failing Canadians. You had an opportunity to change that. You have chosen not to. You have chosen to attempt to keep yourself in power with your costly NDP coalition partners by creating something that already exists at provincial levels—
Welcome, Minister.
I think the behaviour we just saw from Mr. Ellis is shameful. We're really trying to have a thoughtful conversation about a very important piece of legislation that is going to make an incredible impact on the lives of Canadians. You don't have to agree with everything. The idea behind a committee meeting is to have an analytical discussion as to how we can improve a piece of legislation, not get into the political, rhetorical diatribes that we saw.
I'm personally very excited to see this piece of legislation. I spent time working at the provincial level in the parliament in Ontario, where we brought in pharmacare legislation, a program called OHIP+. I was very disappointed when I saw the Conservative government of Doug Ford gut that legislation, denying so many Ontarians access to important life-saving medication, so I'm thrilled that at the federal level we are coming in with the national pharmacare plan.
I'm interested, Minister, in learning about the details. I know that this is a thoughtful piece of legislation. Can you share with us, if this legislation passes, the next steps in terms of engaging the provinces, the territories and indigenous peoples in rolling out this particular program? Also, I'm interested in the work that you are doing pursuant to this legislation, if passed, to ensure that all Canadians get access to diabetes medication and contraceptives.
:
I think, in the first order—and this is why I was pushing back—that we have a very serious problem, and that problem is that a huge number of Canadians don't have drug coverage.
If we're discussing how we address that problem, I'm totally open to different ideas. I think this process is indicative of that. We had two different parties with two different ideas try to come together and find common ground. If other parties have other ideas, then I think it's important to talk about them.
Frankly, if they have no idea and they just think people should continue to be uninsured, then yes, I'm going to point that out. I think that's important to highlight, and I don't think it is appropriate to try to obfuscate behind some kind of weird strategy.
What I will say in terms of the next steps, because this is critically important, is that we've already started those steps. There have been very productive conversations with every province and every territory. They have really set aside partisanship to ask, in each province and each jurisdiction, how we can work with that jurisdiction of authority to augment and make better what they have.
We have provinces that are leaders, so let's acknowledge Quebec, B.C., Nova Scotia, and Manitoba particularly, which are really taking leadership in this area. We want to see that go even further to be able to work with leaders and to be able to expand our circle of action.
What's exciting about that is that it's an example of governments of all political stripes recognizing that diabetes and contraceptives are not something that we should be crossing swords over or trying to score political points on, that it's really how we get the medicine to people who need it and how we talk about solutions. It could be quite frustrating when I'm talking to provinces about solutions to be curtailed from that.
Then I would add an additional measure. Obviously, to really finalize those conversations, we need the House to adopt this so that we can finish those conversations, but then I would turn to the non-insured health benefit. You were asking, very importantly, about indigenous peoples, and I think that this is an important opportunity, in conjunction with what we're doing with the non-insured health benefit, to consider its efficacy and make sure that everybody has access to the medicine that they need. That's an iterative process, and it has to be taken a step at a time.
:
I think that's a fair characterization. We have to work it out for each province, but the idea is that you would have choice.
Somebody who has existing coverage can continue to use that coverage. For somebody who doesn't have coverage or is under-insured, this would give them a path towards coverage.
There are a lot of folks who are under-insured. Somebody may only have 70% coverage for their medicine, as an example, and can't afford the 30% copayment. That means they're not getting the medicine they need, which means they don't adhere to a regime of taking that medication, which means they wind up with a chronic disease, which means they end up in our hospital system, which costs us an enormous amount of money.
It's more than social justice. It's critical that those people have access to a choice. That is what this measure is going to do. It's going to open up a choice about whether you want to use your existing insurance or go with the single-payer universal system.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I'd like to welcome the minister, who has joined us today.
Minister, the Bloc Québécois is in favour of the principle of helping sick people and the most vulnerable among us to obtain health care and benefit from a pharmacare program. Of course, you know the Bloc Québécois' position and that of the Quebec government, which are similar.
Minister, here is my first question: Have you had a discussion with the Quebec Minister of Health, Christian Dubé? If so, what did he tell you, in concrete terms?
:
You're mostly avoiding answering questions, as you just did again. That demonstrates a lack of respect for Quebec's wishes and, of course, for the request made by the Government of Quebec.
So your decision has been noted, and warm words and negotiations will no doubt follow.
I'll continue, Minister. You must understand that the Government of Quebec's own pharmacare program has already been in place for 30 years—yes, 30 years. You know that you copied the Quebec model for the child-care system. So what we are requesting today is legitimate. We already have a model. We simply want to get our money and manage our own program, which, I repeat, has been around for 30 years.
Quebeckers already have a program and are paying for it. They don't want to pay twice by also paying the federal government for its new program.
So the question we are asking you is this: do you agree that Quebeckers, who already have a program, should be able to get money from the federal government, to which they already pay taxes, and that these funds should be set aside by Ottawa with no strings attached to enhance the existing Quebec program?
That's the question.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to underscore the important historic nature of this hearing today. It was 60 years ago that Tommy Douglas, the first leader of the NDP and the father of Canadian medicare, helped to push through the House—in a minority Parliament—universal health care. Now we're back, 60 years later.
Tommy Douglas's intention was always to move from universal health care to universal pharmacare, because the reality is that every other developed country that has universal health care also has universal pharmacare, so this is a historic hearing.
I certainly want to thank the many organizations that have brought this into being: the Canadian Health Coalition, the Canadian Labour Congress, the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, the Council of Canadians and so many other groups that have been pushing for years for this start of universal pharmacare. It's a historic day.
I want to thank you, Mr. Chair, for giving us adequate notice. We've known about this motion of instruction to the House for weeks, of course. We knew because of your memo last week that we had a week and a half to prepare for today's hearing and to prepare amendments. I appreciate the being here.
I do note that my Conservative colleagues have not asked a question on the legislation yet. I hope they took the week and a half you gave them to read the legislation.
Mr. Chair, I would like, through you, to ask the Minister of Health the following questions about some of the clauses of the bill.
First off, clause 8 talks about a national formulary. How do you see this developing as a national formulary that is required—once we pass this bill, as you know—to be put into place one year from now?
:
To be very direct, you see it in going to diabetes clinics where patients like Amber are forced into choices of paying for their rent, their groceries or their medicine. Often, medicine is what drops.
What is so tragic is that same clinic will see the person return much later with an improperly managed condition, like diabetes, in a terrible state, or they wind up with a terrible chronic disease or illness.
Seeing something like that for Amber, something that is entirely preventable, I don't think we want to live in that kind of country. Raina, a 12-year-old, was at the announcement of this. She's an advocate and a kid who has diabetes, and she said to me that no one in this country should not not be able to afford their medicine. Sometimes when somebody is young, they can put something so clearly. I find it hard to disagree with Raina or with Amber that they deserve to be able to get their medication.
:
In a very practical sense, I'll bring up dental care, because I just mentioned yesterday at noon that we surpassed 100,000 seniors, which in three weeks is pretty outstanding.
When you go and meet with a senior.... I think of Raphael. Yesterday, when I was in Toronto, I had an opportunity to talk with Raphael about what this meant. He could go in to get that care and he wasn't going to wind up sick. When I was in New Brunswick last week, I talked to dentists, who said, “Do you know what? I know the people who don't have access to dental care, and I know I'm going to see them in an emergency room, and I'm going to have to come in on a Saturday and not get paid and worry about whether or not they're going to lose their life because they didn't have access to care.”
It's the same thing for diabetes, and what we're making real with dental care we need to make real with diabetes medication and with contraceptives. It's about getting practical results and being upstream, which is not only about social justice: As I said, this is a huge opportunity to save money and avoid strain on our health system.
Minister, we're going to tell the truth today. It's been 30 years since Quebeckers developed the expertise to administer their own pharmacare program, without federal assistance. We didn't ask you for a single cent and we've never needed your expertise. What's more, you don't have that expertise, since you don't currently have a pharmacare program. I recognize that you have good intentions and that it's a good idea. That's great. We're in agreement there.
Currently, 45% of the population of Quebec is covered under a public drug plan, while the remaining 55% of Quebeckers are covered under a private plan.
Minister, what can the federal government do better than the Quebec government, which has 30 years of experience?
:
I'm pleased to have the opportunity to speak now, Mr. Chair, because I have an announcement to make. My Bloc Québécois colleague seems to be suggesting the opposite of what nine major organizations in Quebec stated just a few hours ago. These organizations include the Union des consommateurs, the Centrale des syndicats démocratiques, the Coalition solidarité santé, the Confédération des syndicats nationaux, the Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec, the Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Québec, the Table des regroupements provinciaux d'organismes communautaires et bénévoles, to name just a few.
These organizations, which represent over two million Quebeckers, are saying that they applaud Bill introduced by the federal government: “Never have we been so close to establishing truly public and universal pharmacare. Quebec's hybrid public‑private program is creating an unsustainable two‑tiered system that must be corrected.”
In the brief they submitted today, these organizations point out that the current Quebec pharmacare program is far from guaranteeing everyone reasonable and equitable access to medication, as set out under Quebec's Act respecting prescription drug insurance. These organizations are saying that Bill puts in place a framework leading to the creation of universal and public pharmacare. They stated the following: “We're calling on the federal government not to give in to the provinces and territories that are demanding the right to opt out unconditionally and with full financial compensation.”
Minister, given that this large coalition representing a significant proportion of the population of Quebec is saying that it supports Bill C‑64, should Quebec members of Parliament listen to it?
:
I think you've answered the question I've asked.
Again, you have to go on and on. Maybe you could just try answering the question instead of doing your political grandstanding.
That said, what you've now said is that what you've created is a very basic, inferior program on behalf of Canadians. I find that absolutely interesting.
Built into this bill, you talked about the creation of the Canadian drug agency, which I understand should have been stood up around May 1. It is in your purview as the Minister of Health, so I'll give you kudos on that.
Given that you could have actually created an agency that has significant oversight.... Maybe you don't realize it should have oversight, because the approvals that are done through the process, including Health Canada, the PMPRB, the new CDA, pCPA, etc., are some of the worst in the country, or maybe not the worst, and you could have actually changed that with this legislation, but you chose not to, can you tell Canadians why they're going to be left out in the cold waiting for new medications?
I'll add my welcome for seeing you here today, Minister, and thanks to the officials for being here.
My first question is along the same lines as some of my colleagues around the table, perhaps with a little different flavour.
I think Canadians—people in my jurisdiction in the Yukon, for example—have a large number of public employees covered by insurance plans, as well as by some of the larger private employers. They are very interested in the integrity of those programs continuing.
Also, it has been pointed out that in subclause 6(1), there is the authorization for the minister to enter into an agreement to make payments to the province or territory “to increase any existing public pharmacare coverage—and to provide universal, single-payer, first-dollar coverage” for the specific areas of contraception and diabetes.
Is there a vision, ultimately, of a universal single-payer system? A single-payer system is frequently used in advocacy and in various reports recommending that we ultimately move towards universally accessible pharmacare.
Maybe you can tell me about your vision for a single-payer system and how that is compatible with the existing system that many benefit from with third party coverage.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Hanley, and I thank you for your advocacy and work in public health prior to this job and during it.
In the first order, what we've said is that this is a bit of a pilot. We have an opportunity to see a single-payer universal system out of an academic construct and out in the real world.
In P.E.I., we have another model, which is a fill-in-the-gaps model, and we have now a committee that's going to be able to look at it and examine the costs and the future path for a single-payer universal system. We're going to be able to compare that and then be able to make informed decisions about the path forward. What I've said is that the conversation needs to be informed by data and real-world results and action.
If I could, I'll take a moment to talk about, for example, why providing contraceptives is such a logical place to start with a single-payer universal plan. You could have somebody in an abusive relationship with a partner who has insurance, and they have to go through their partner in order to get the contraception they need, or you could have a 16-year-old who wants access to contraception but doesn't have parents who would support them in getting access to that contraception.
This is, I think, a very logical place, when you're talking about that experiment, and also because of the number of under-insured folks with diabetes.
:
Thank you so much for that.
When I go to AIDS clinics, just as an example, they have a huge problem getting people to come in and get tested and have conversations, because of the stigma. AIDS is an entirely manageable condition. It's a chronic condition. It doesn't have to be a death sentence. We want people to get care.
On even a more granular basis, how many kids.... We look at teen suicide around sexual identity issues, and shame has led to terrible outcomes. I can say that the lack of conversations around sex in my own household was incredibly damaging. When sexual violence was visited upon my family—and we didn't talk about sex in our household—that was incredibly damaging and left me very confused about sex.
Having a broader conversation in this country about sex and sexuality, and sexual health and sexual autonomy, is critically important, and I hope it's part of the conversation that we'll have as we're talking about contraceptives.
We've gone a bit over the time that you had committed for us. We're grateful to you for showing up right off the hop on this study. Regardless of political views, the passion that you bring to your work is evident. Thank you for that.
Minister, you're welcome to stay, but you're free to go.
We still have about 25 minutes with officials. I'm not going to suspend, because I'm sure we have questions for them.
Thanks again, Minister.
Colleagues, I know that we're facing an imminent emergency with the lack of coffee. We've made the folks aware of that impending emergency and trust that it will be rectified fairly soon.
We're going to continue now with rounds of questions. We're back to the Conservatives for five minutes.
Dr. Ellis, go ahead, please.
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
Interestingly enough, as you know, we had some probing questions with respect to drug approvals in Canada, and, as I said previously, specifically had an opportunity here with respect to this legislation because it does talk about standing up the new Canadian drug agency, and there certainly was an opportunity to have some safeguards around the Canadian drug agency and drug approvals in Canada.
Perhaps now I could ask the officials about the drug approval process in Canada, because, quite frankly, we've already established that Canadians don't have access to primary care. I think everybody out there watching knows clearly that it's hard to get a prescription if you don't have access to a physician to write you one, which, again, this government has failed to address. They've made it clear historically that they would provide 7,500 new doctors, nurses and nurse practitioners to Canada, even though we're missing about 30,000 family doctors.
That being said, one thing that's going to plague Canadians in the not so distant future and is plaguing them now—I spoke about this previously—is the number of days from global first launch to public reimbursement.
There were 460 new medicines launched from 2012 to the end of 2021. My colleague from the NDP referenced New Zealand as a beacon. Interestingly enough, in this particular study, New Zealand had the longest time for approval, at 1398 days.
Could the officials tell me who had the second-longest time for approval of medications in this group of countries? Anybody?
I'll say, on behalf of Canadians, that there was an opportunity here to change the Canadian drug agency and to have oversight, but the officials and the , in spite of the fact that all Canadians know it takes an excessively long time, as referenced by the data in the study, don't think that's a problem. Perhaps that's why we have a problem.
The other part that I'll return to is new drug launches in Canada.
It appears from the evidence here in front of me that new drugs are not being launched in Canada as frequently as in other countries. Do you think that's true?
:
Our committee is tasked with reviewing this legislation. We're going to go through it line by line. With that in mind, I read the legislation, and I have what may seem like some mundane questions.
There's one provision here, and I don't understand what you mean by it. Perhaps you can explain it to me.
Let me start off by saying that I've been a long-time doctor. I also have a few law degrees, including one in health law. I worked for WHO, writing health law, and I was part of drafting some pharmaceutical legislation. I've now been in Parliament for five years. If there's anyone who should be able to read things and understand them, I would have thought I'd be one, but I don't understand this bit on principles.
is to consider a bunch of principles when they're consulting with the provinces and territories on implementing national universal pharmacare. It says that one of those principles is to “provide universal coverage of pharmaceutical products across Canada.”
I don't see, within that wording, a clear indication of what that means. Universal coverage means that every person will receive pharmacare and pharmaceutical products from the government. Which pharmaceutical products are included? Is it all pharmaceutical products?
It seems very vague to me, almost to the extent that it nullifies any meaning at all. What do you mean by that statement?
It says—and it's rather weird wording—“The Minister is to consider”. Usually it's “shall” or “will” consider, but here it's “is to consider”. What are they supposed to be considering here? What is the goal of that?
My questions are for Ms. Boudreau.
Ms. Boudreau, you're an associate assistant deputy minister at the strategic policy branch of the Department of Health. When it comes to strategy, we typically know what people want and what people have.
I'd like to confirm that your department received the motion unanimously passed by the National Assembly on June 14, 2019. In other words, it was supported by all parties representing the people of Quebec. In that motion, the National Assembly of Quebec wanted to “reaffirm that Quebec has had its own general prescription insurance plan”, “indicate to the federal government that Quebec refuses to adhere to a pan‑Canadian pharmacare plan” and “ask the Government of Quebec to maintain its prescription drug insurance plan and that it demand full and unconditional financial compensation from the federal government if a proposal for a pan‑Canadian pharmacare plan is officially tabled.”
Ms. Boudreau, did officials at your department provide you with this motion?
I'd just like to make sure that you received the statement issued a few hours ago by nine Quebec labour and community groups calling for the adoption of Bill . Did you receive it? If not, I can provide it to you. The Union des consommateurs, the Centrale des syndicats démocratiques and the Confédération des syndicats nationaux, to name a few, were very clear. There's a consensus in Quebec in favour of the bill.
[English]
I come back to the issue of the approval process of Health Canada. I think my Conservative colleague cut you off, but it's important for members of the committee to understand. Is it a 300-day period for approval, through Health Canada, from the application date to availability for consumers? I just want to understand what you were saying.
:
In terms of the data that Michelle was referring to, it's the Health Canada regulatory standard of 300 calendar days service, and that is met over 99% of the time. As Michelle mentioned, there are expedited routes in there as well.
Further on the detail of the rest of the drug approval process, there is the health technology assessment approval process. I will be referring to the report by the Conference Board of Canada, “Access and Time to Patient”. That's the data I'll be referencing. It's a January 2024 product. It identifies that the time to review a product following a notice of compliance from Health Canada through the former CADTH is 246 days. That's 2022 data. The average time spent for products that were waiting to be engaged by the pCPA after—this is CADTH data only, as I don't have it for the INESSS—was 172 days in 2022, with an average time spent in the pCPA negotiations of 189 days.
There are different sources on what that total time is. You've referenced a data point that, as we said, we don't have in front of us. We have from 736 to, as another data source I have suggests, 900, but each of those steps is performing a function and....
I'm sorry.
:
I appreciate all of that.
We have a guillotine motion, effectively, for a programming motion, so we have very limited time. Therefore, not understanding whether this was worked on for several months or a year is actually quite important when we're coming to making these decisions.
I would ask that you submit to the committee by tomorrow the exact time this started being worked on, so we can ensure that we have the adequate information as we're drafting amendments and considering the rest of this bill.
If it was a year, was that not enough time to adequately consult with provincial health ministers prior to bringing forward this legislation?
:
Within a day of this legislation being put forward, we had Quebec and Alberta both coming out very firmly against it, saying they wanted to opt out of it. Is that not terribly concerning?
Saskatchewan also came along not very far thereafter, indicating their concerns with it. Is that not something that concerns you? The provinces and territories are responsible for the delivery of health care, by and large, in this country, and they are already opting out.
Also, many of these provinces—all of them, in fact—already have their own plans. There could have been work to try to expand their plans, but instead, we have a pamphlet of sorts that is a plan to create a plan to possibly create a piece.
The timelines of when this was worked on are extremely important.
Thank you to the officials for the hard work you've done on this and for coming here today.
Unfortunately, I'm going to follow on the same theme as my colleague Dr. Powlowski, who has led us down this path.
In clause 2 of Bill , pharmacare is defined to mean “a program that provides coverage of prescription drugs and related products.” I understand “prescription drugs”. “Related products”, however, are not defined. I think that may leave a lot of room for interpretation.
What does “related products” mean in the context of Bill ?
:
I call the meeting back to order.
Welcome to our second panel of witnesses. Thank you all for being here. I know the circumstances didn't allow you to have that much notice, but you're here and in person, and we greatly appreciate that.
We have with us for the next 90 minutes the Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association, which is being represented by Jim Keon, president, and Jody Cox, vice-president of federal and international affairs.
From the Canadian Health Coalition, we have Steven Staples, national director of policy and advocacy, and Mike Bleskie, advocate for type 1 diabetes.
From the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association, we have Stephen Frank, president and CEO.
From the Office of the Parliamentary Budget Officer, we have Yves Giroux, Parliamentary Budget Officer, and Lisa Barkova, analyst.
Welcome to all of you. We're going to invite you to start with a five-minute opening statement in the order in which you appear on the notice of meeting, so we're going to start with the Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association for five minutes.
Welcome to the committee. You have the floor.
The Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association and its Biosimilars Canada division would like to thank the committee members for this opportunity to contribute to the study of Bill .
[English]
Making medicines more affordable and accessible is the key value proposition of generic and biosimilar medicines, which today are used to fill more than three-quarters of all prescriptions in Canada. Expanding the use of generics and biosimilars helps drug plans to fund innovative treatments for patients and contributes to the overall sustainability of drug plans.
Not surprisingly, maximizing the use of these cost-efficient treatments to help fund pharmacare was a key recommendation of the pharmacare advisory council report in 2019.
We have provided a brief to members and will focus our remarks today on three main areas: the medications to be covered for patients under the proposed pharmacare regime, guiding principles for bilateral agreements, and bulk purchasing, which has not been defined.
On the list of drugs, expanding access to ensure all Canadians can benefit from the life-saving and life-altering medicines they need is an important objective. However, the list of diabetes and contraceptive medications in the February 29 pharmacare announcement is not comprehensive. There are important gaps that need to be addressed. We have highlighted these in our brief.
The current non-comprehensive approach also raises patient equity concerns, as it could lead to suboptimal prescribing of the medicines that are made available to the public for free and lead to suboptimal health outcomes for patients.
We are also concerned that the non-comprehensive approach may provide a disincentive for public drug plan formularies to continue their coverage of a broad range of prescription medicines and provide a disincentive to expand coverage to include new drugs in the future. These same concerns apply to drug plans provided by Canadian employers.
We recommend that all diabetes drugs and contraceptives that are currently reimbursed by public drug programs in Canada be covered if pharmacare is implemented. This principle should also apply to medicines added in the future.
On guiding principles, under Bill the federal government must negotiate and enter into bilateral agreements with individual provinces and territories. An important guiding principle for drug formulary management that is already employed by public drug programs in Canada is to reimburse for only the low-cost alternative product of a pharmaceutical active substance.
In order to help ensure the sustainability of the plan, Bill should be amended to clarify that only generic and biosimilar medicines will be reimbursed once they are authorized for sale by Health Canada and enter the Canadian market. This principle should be included in all bilateral pharmacare agreements.
On bulk purchasing, “bulk purchasing” is not defined in Bill . It is not clear what this means. It is important to recognize that Canadian governments already combine their purchasing power to negotiate internationally competitive drug prices for Canadians. They do this through the pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance, or pCPA.
It is critical that the pharmacare regime respect the existing pharmaceutical pricing infrastructure to ensure stability of the Canadian drug supply. This will ensure that Canadians continue to benefit from access to both cost-saving generic and biosimilar medicines and the innovative new medicines Canadians need.
Prices for generic medicines are controlled through the pCPA tiered pricing framework. This provides a stable and predictable environment for generic manufacturers to continue to provide existing medicines for Canadians and make the investments to launch new cost-saving drugs.
According to pCPA, joint efforts between pCPA and CGPA have resulted in savings of more than $4 billion to participating drug plans over the past 10 years. These savings will continue to grow through a new three-year agreement between CGPA and pCPA that came into force on October 1 of last year.
The pCPA also negotiates prices for biosimilar medicines that are set to be significantly lower than the list price for the original biologic drugs. The expanded use of biosimilars has saved public drug plans hundreds of millions of dollars that have been reinvested into coverage for innovative new therapies and the overall sustainability of drug programs.
We recommend that governments continue to exercise their power to collectively negotiate drug prices in Canada through the pCPA.
In closing, thank you again for inviting the CGPA and its Biosimilars Canada division to appear as witnesses on Bill . Jody and I would be pleased to answer any questions you may have.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Casey. It's a pleasure to be back here.
Dear members of the committee, my name is Steve Staples. I'm the director of policy and advocacy for the Canadian Health Coalition.
Our organization was founded in 1979. Our members work to defend and improve our public health care system. We comprise citizens, frontline health care workers' unions, community groups, students and public health care experts.
Members of the Canadian Health Coalition welcome the introduction of the pharmacare act, Bill . This landmark legislation is an important first step in continuing progress toward a universal national pharmacare program.
Canada is the only country in the developed world that has a universal health care system that does not include universal coverage for prescription drugs outside of hospitals. Pharmacare is needed urgently to improve the lives of those living in Canada. As we have heard, one in five people reported to Statistics Canada that they do not have access to prescription drug coverage. Importantly, low-wage workers, immigrants and racialized people are hit the hardest.
In addition, the overall cost of drugs to the health system must be reduced. According to the PBO, prices for prescription drugs in Canada are roughly 25% higher than the median for OECD countries, and a single-payer pharmacare system with the power of bulk purchasing is the best route to negotiate lower prices from pharmaceutical manufacturers.
Canadian Health Coalition members heartily endorse the recommendations of the 2019 national advisory council on the implementation of national pharmacare led by Dr. Eric Hoskins, which was referenced earlier.
A nationwide program to achieve public coverage for contraception and diabetes medicine and related equipment, delivered by a single-payer approach through provincial health systems, is a historic step in the direction recommended by Hoskins in his report on pharmacare, but there are many more steps to achieve universal coverage of a national formulary of medicines.
We urge the government to ensure that the legislation adheres to a single-payer, national universal public delivery in partnership with provinces and territories, along with adequate funding and accountability measures, in accordance with the principles of the Canada Health Act.
I would like to share the remainder of my time with my colleague, Mike Bleskie.
:
Through you, Mr. Chair, I thank you for the opportunity to be here.
My name is Mike Bleskie, and I have been a type 1 diabetic for 19 years. I'm also a gig worker in my 30s. As such, like many, I don't have private health insurance, and I either cannot qualify or cannot afford to pay for a plan myself.
Although Ontario's benefits cover a portion of my personal expenses, my out-of-pocket costs stand at about $450 a month, mostly from my continuous glucose monitor, which is not covered in Ontario, and my pump supplies. That leaves me with hard decisions about the cost of food and rent at the beginning of every single month. It also leads to situations in which I'm forced to consider rationing my supplies, which can lead to health complications.
My experience talking to nurses, doctors and other diabetics across Canada tells me that I am far from alone. Insulin is not a luxury for us; it is a basic necessity for every single type 1 diabetic. Without the proper treatment, we are exposed to complications like debilitating nerve pain, amputation and permanent blindness. A universal single-payer pharmacare system is the only policy that guarantees that every type 1 diabetic in Canada, regardless of their economic circumstance, can access live-sustaining therapy when they need it. Policies that attempt to fill gaps only leave more gaps that need to be filled later, such as what we have seen in Ontario with OHIP+ .
I urge this committee to support this bill promptly so that we can get insulin into the hands of diabetics as soon as possible. I'm also asking this committee to ensure that syringes, pen needles, pump cannulas and continuous glucose monitors are fully covered as part of the diabetic supply fund contained in Bill , as these items represent the biggest expenses to most diabetics and, in many cases, are not part of public coverage in most provinces.
I appreciate your time, and we welcome your questions.
:
Good afternoon. It's a pleasure to be here.
My name is Stephen Frank, and I'm pleased to be here today in my role as president and CEO of the Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association. An important part of my job is representing the 27 million Canadians who are covered by workplace and other health benefit plans.
Canada's life and health insurers believe that all Canadians should be able to access the drugs they have been prescribed. To achieve this, we know that both public and privately-funded plans are a necessity. Unfortunately, Bill falls short of its goal to ensure that all Canadians have access to the medications they need. It puts what's working well today at risk.
[Translation]
Workplace benefit plans are an essential pillar of the Canadian health care system. In the most recent year, Canada's life and health insurers paid for over 35% of prescription drug spending in the country. Our plans cover more drugs than even the most generous public plan.
In fact, 85% of Canadians say that their health insurance plan saves them money. They don't want to see their plan disrupted. Given the choice, they would overwhelmingly prefer that the government focus on providing coverage to Canadians who don't have it.
[English]
On behalf of the majority of Canadians who already have drug coverage, I ask members what this proposal will mean for the average Canadian family. Despite much of the discussion about this bill by various stakeholders, it goes further than contemplating a new pharmacare program for diabetes and contraceptive drugs: It requires the federal government to begin the rollout of a broad pharmacare program for an essential medicines list no later than 12 months after the bill gets royal assent. There are material and many unknown risks to disrupting existing programs for millions of Canadians.
The Minister of Health has stated that people who have an existing drug plan are going to continue to enjoy the access they have to their drugs. If that's the minister's intent, it's not at all clear from this bill. As many of the questions reinforced today, its text is ambiguous. It repeatedly calls for universal single-payer pharmacare in Canada with no mention of workplace benefit plans. Read in its entirety, the bill could result in practical and even legal barriers to our ability to provide Canadians with the drug benefits that they currently have.
For the majority of Canadians, therefore, this plan, as it's currently written, risks disrupting existing prescription drug coverage paid for by employers, limiting choice and using scarce federal resources to simply replace existing coverage, while leaving a huge gap for uninsured Canadians who rely on other medications beyond diabetic drugs and contraceptives.
There is a better way.
For example, using the $1.5 billion that has been allocated to this program to target those without coverage would allow the government to provide thousands of medications to several hundred thousand Canadians who currently lack drug plans. In other words, we could, as a country, use scarce federal dollars wisely to make a profound impact on the lives of those who do not have drug plans, while protecting the benefits that are currently working so well for the vast majority.
In conclusion, we believe that this legislation needs to be significantly amended to focus on ensuring universal drug coverage for all Canadians by addressing any gaps in the drug insurance that currently exists and to be clear with Canadians about what exactly we're trying to do.
I look forward to your questions. Thank you.
:
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
We are pleased to be here today to discuss our analysis of Bill , an act respecting pharmacare.
With me today I have Lisa Barkova, our lead analyst on pharmacare.
If memory serves, this is the first time that I'm appearing before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health as a parliamentary budget officer, but this is not the first time that the office has responded to requests from the committee regarding pharmacare. In fact, in response to requests from this committee, in September 2017 my predecessor produced an estimate of the cost to the federal government of implementing a national pharmacare program.
Furthermore, following requests from parliamentarians, my office prepared an updated cost estimate of a single-payer universal drug program in October 2023.
[Translation]
Recently, on May 15, 2024, we published a cost estimate for Bill , which you're studying today.
As the first phase of a national universal pharmacare program, Bill C‑64 proposes to provide universal first‑dollar coverage for a variety of contraceptive drugs and for the treatment of diabetes.
The purpose of the program is to enhance and expand the coverage provided by provincial and territorial plans, not to replace it.
We estimate that, if implemented, Bill C‑64 would increase government spending by $1.9 billion over five years. This estimate assumes that any medications that are currently covered by provincial and territorial governments, as well as private insurance providers, will remain covered on the same terms.
Ms. Barkova and I look forward to answering all your questions regarding our analysis of Bill C‑64 or other work done by my office.
Thank you.
:
I think if there's one point to underline today, it's that this bill is ambiguous. We actually don't know what it means, because it is not a defined term.
The building of this bill, when you read it in its entirety, references the Canada Health Act. The preamble makes references to previous studies that have been done. “Single payer” is mentioned multiple times, as is “universal”. Those as a package have been well understood in the courts, and over time in the provinces, to mean a single payer—not federal, provincial or private, but a single payer. “Universal” means it's the same for everybody. Our concern is that it could also be interpreted to mean that private industry is no longer able to provide coverage.
When we read this legislation, because of that lack of clarity and because those terms aren't defined, we are concerned with the way it's drafted and we think it needs to be amended, at a very minimum, to reflect whether the vision of the minister is what the government's intent is. We would be supportive of that, of targeting their efforts on where the need is, but I don't think that we can be confident that this is what the legislation reflects, so we are quite concerned.
We do believe there are some significant amendments required to reflect what we heard the minister saying earlier today.
:
Thank you very much for that.
Through the chair to Monsieur Giroux, thank you for being here and thank you for your analysis.
We know that federal government spending is ballooning out of control. That does not mean that pharmacare is not important. We've heard now from Mr. Keon that there are not going to be any savings here, so this will continue to be an expense to the federal government and, of course, to taxpayers.
We don't have that much time, but maybe you could outline that expense, which is going to be a recurring expense to taxpayers, with respect to Bill .
:
In my case, I know that at one point when I had finished a work contract, I did have private insurance. When it came time to finish that work contract, I was told by the private insurance provider that because of my pre-existing condition, I was not able to go on to the bridging insurance that would normally be offered to an employee. Therefore, I had to pay significantly more in order to stay on an insurance plan with that company.
In another sort of tangential way, I recently started on an insulin pump. I have been on an insulin pump for about six months now. In the months before I was a diabetic—and I'm sure Dr. Powlowski will be able to agree that these numbers are a little bit terrifying—my A1C before I started with my insulin pump was 11.4. The target for a type 1 diabetic is to be under 7. Since starting the insulin pump, my numbers have now improved to 7.7. That is a huge increase in my personal health, but I made financial sacrifices to do that because I am paying out of pocket for a lot of these expenses.
One of the things that I've done in the past to try to make my dollar stretch was to take my infusion sets, the cannula that goes into my skin to deliver my insulin, and to try to squeeze an extra two days out of that infusion set. What that means is that I'm risking scar tissue damage on my stomach. I've seen folks, friends of mine, who have been on insulin pumps who have been in that same situation, and they have pockmarks all over their stomach from their infusion sets because they've had to ration the supplies that they have access to. Those are the kinds of things that you often hear about.
There are also the other knock-on effects. When I was talking to different patients from around the country, I got a letter from a family in Prince George who have a 16-year-old son with diabetes. They have not been able to go on vacation since his diagnosis because they put in upwards of $250 a month in order to try to pay for their specific supplies in order to keep him healthy. We see some significant challenges financially, but also in terms of the knock-on health effects of people who don't have access to these medications.
I think that this also stretches over to other areas of medications that aren't even in the current wave of this act. I think that as we start to expand access to medications, we'll start to see those upstream and downstream costs change significantly over time, which will lead to personal savings in people's pockets as time goes on.
:
I was encouraged by the minister's comments and I think if we could see that reflected in the legislation, I think we'd be vehemently in accordance with what he has in mind, but we don't see that reflected in this bill. I think that's the issue that we have.
Terms have not been defined. They're used repetitively in different contexts in different ways, and they could be interpreted to mean different things in different sections of the act.
The preamble requires the minister to take into consideration some previous studies that have firmly recommended a universal single-payer pharmacare program, and the Canada Health Act is referenced throughout. When you read it in its entirety, it creates an enormous amount of uncertainty. Those terms have developed a meaning over time in Canada through the courts, through the provinces, to mean certain things. I think we take comfort in what the minister says, but we also would like to see that better reflected in the legislation.
We talked a bit about dental care today. A lot of care was taken with that program to ensure that it was targeted at those who didn't already have coverage, and protections were put in place to ensure that employers didn't drop plans. I think that this kind of care and attention needs to be brought to this legislation so that it actually, over time, doesn't drift away from the intent that the minister described for us today.
I would like to welcome the witnesses taking part in the second part of this meeting.
My first questions are for the Parliamentary Budget Officer, Yves Giroux.
Mr. Giroux, I have looked carefully at your May 15 note on Bill , which states the following: “The PBO estimates that the first phase of national universal pharmacare will increase federal program spending by $1.9 billion over five years. This estimate assumes that any medications that are currently covered by provincial and territorial governments, as well as private insurance providers, will remain covered on the same terms.” This includes the Quebec program.
If I understand this analysis correctly, the $1.9 billion will benefit provinces that don't have a drug coverage program. Provinces like Quebec, which already have a drug coverage program, will receive less money.
:
Thank you for your usual co‑operation, Mr. Giroux.
I'd now like to talk about a study you conduct each year. This study is the report on the fiscal sustainability of the Canadian provinces and the country as a whole. Fiscal sustainability isn't easy to achieve everywhere. You probably know what I'm getting at, Mr. Giroux. According to your 2023 report, five provinces are sustainable, relative to the percentage of GDP and estimates of the financial gap between the provinces and subnational governments. The five other provinces are categorized as unsustainable, as are the territories. You can see where I'm going. Fifty per cent of provincial governments, including Quebec, face a potential long‑term financial risk when additional public spending is introduced.
My question is hypothetical, but nevertheless based on your analysis of the fiscal sustainability of the various governments. Based on past experience, if the federal government rolled out a significant program such as pharmacare and decided to pull back and reduce its funding, how would this affect the fiscal sustainability of Quebec and the provinces?
:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chair.
I mentioned earlier that this is a historic moment and a historic hearing, and I cited a number of important organizations.
I want to give a shout-out to Canadian Labour Congress president Bea Bruske. They submitted a memo to this committee saying, “The [Canadian Labour Congress] calls for the speedy passage of Bill , an act respecting pharmacare, before the House of Commons and the Senate adjourn for the summer, so that millions of Canadians can access contraception and diabetes drug and device coverage, giving them some relief from the high cost of living.” I would note that Elizabeth Kwan from the CLC is here in the room today.
I also want to give a shout-out to the Canadian Health Coalition and thank Mr. Staples for being here.
Mr. Staples, we've heard from one party in the House of Commons—the Conservatives—and a number of lobbyists that the system we have in pharmacare now works well in Canada. You deal with frontline workers, such as nurses. Is it true that everything is fine when it comes to access to medication?
My second question to you is about the issue of a pharmacare program. Is it true that a pharmacare program will help save health care dollars?
Mr. Julian, I share your concern. When I hear witnesses say that the system's working very well, I ask, “For whom is it working very well?” We just heard from Mike Bleskie. It doesn't sound like the system's working very well for him. It seems to be working for industry and for insurance companies, but it's not working well for all Canadians. That's why this pharmacare act is so important. We must get Bill through.
Also, we heard that the Canada Health Act, in the view of industry, creates uncertainty. I would differ. I think the Canada Health Act is very important. For 40 years, it's made a guarantee that Canadians, when they need medical care, will get it, not based on who they work for, what insurance program they have or how much money they have, but because they need it. I'm very passionate that the CHA creates certainty for Canadians, and we want that system. We don't want a U.S. system.
When I hear frontline workers talk, and they do.... We had 100 frontline health care workers come here in February. They met with many members of this committee, and I express my gratitude for all of you who took time out to meet them at a very busy time. These are people who are working with all kinds of issues in their hospitals and in their health care environments, but they took time to come to Ottawa to talk about the importance of pharmacare with all the challenges that they face in the health care system.
Do you know why? What I hear them say is that filled prescriptions mean empty emergency rooms. They know that if people are getting their medications, if they're not cutting their meds, if they're not making choices today on whether to take their medicine or not, they don't end up presenting themselves with far worse conditions in the emergency wards. That's where a lot of cost savings can come in that we're not hearing about.
Of course there are cost savings for individuals. Of course there are cost savings through bulk purchasing; we can get those prices down to the median of OECD countries because they're so high, but there are also savings in the health care system.
St. Michael's Hospital did a study. It took 700 patients who had trouble economically in paying for their medication, and these patients went out into the world after they were diagnosed. The hospital mailed free medication to half of them. The other half it just let fend for themselves, based on that system that we were talking about a minute ago, however that system works out. Well, they found that those people who had free medication provided to them did far better. They recovered faster. In fact, they could even put a number on it; every patient who received free medication saved the system $1,600 per year. That's an important factor in looking at how we can save money in a national universal single-payer program.
:
Okay, then I'll do without.
In terms of the individual aspects that I have to order, I have to order CGM on a subscription model directly from the company, Dexcom. That is $200 per month, and then they ship it every three months. That is basically a three-month contract that I have to renew all the time.
When it comes to the individual pump supplies, the company that makes my pump, which is called Tandem, offers only one supplier, a company called Diabetes Express, which is a subsidiary of Bayshore HealthCare, which is a subsidiary of Shoppers Drug Mart. They are the only people that I can order those supplies from, so I have to wait for those things to come in from Toronto. In one case, I actually ended up nearly missing a shipment because there were delays in the mail system.
If I was able to actually have more access—
Thank you very much, everyone, for being here. I appreciate your presentations.
It's interesting that we heard one of our members repeat something I've hit on a number of times, which is basically targeting efforts where the need supposedly is. Mr. Frank, you hit that nail right on the head. You talked about the use of that $1.5 billion and putting it into a situation where it may be more effective.
Ultimately, when we look at statistics that suggest that 1.1 million Canadians don't have any type of plan, and that up to 3.8 million Canadians are either not aware of a plan they could have, don't have the funds, or choose not to do it, we see that roughly 10% of the population of Canada don't have access to it.
On putting that $1.5 billion toward that population, I wonder if you could expand on where you think that might be of great value.
:
Thank you you for that. I appreciate it.
Mr. Giroux, it's good to have you here. I recall one of the first meetings we had when I was chair of the government operations committee, and the discussions we had about finances. In many ways, I felt you were apologizing for the fact that where we had been using the terminology of millions of dollars, we're now using the terminology of billions of dollars. I think Canadians need to understand that. They really don't understand that we've made.... As I said to you at the time, my wife and I used to talk about nickels and dimes. Now, instead of talking about millions of dollars, we're talking about billions of dollars with this government and the huge amounts and costs.
When we look at the costs, in particular, you talked about $1.9 billion. One of the things I'm wondering if you can clarify—I have your report here with me—is your mention of how the public drug plans will cost $14.8 billion in 2024 and increase to $17.3 billion in 2027-28.
People who hear these numbers being thrown about will question them. They ask, “What are we talking about here, when we hear $1.9 billion over five years, versus numbers like that?”
:
There's a term I've read, “cost-related non-adherence”. It refers to people cutting pills and skipping the medication their doctor or care provider has prescribed to them because they can't afford it. It's not even just a simple matter of having insurance, because many insurance programs have copays, and some of these copays can be very big.
I live in the community of Regent Park in Toronto. It's a very mixed community. I was in my drugstore just the other day, and there was a customer in front of me who went up to the counter and had to ask what the copay was. The pharmacist said it was $14 for whatever he was getting. He paused and mumbled to himself, “I think I can get that cheaper,” and turned and left. I don't know what happened. How long does that go on? Do they end up in a hospital somewhere?
We've seen this. I've had nurses tell me they've seen patients who have cut their medication and have ended up in very serious condition in the hospital. As I mentioned, I would refer to the study from St. Michael's that found $1,600 per year per patient could be saved by giving people free access to their medication. That's just a start.
I'm very excited to see what this program brings in for these two classes of medications. We'll have the expert panel. We'll get a report back. I think it's going to be very encouraging.
This is something I have been asking for and advocating since I was in grade 7. One of the very first things I did as a type 1 diabetic was attend an all-candidates debate in 2006 and ask how I could make my life more affordable.
I know that there are so many different diabetics out there who want to be able to say, “I have access to the life-sustaining therapy that I need.” As has been said before, rationing is a huge problem. It means that people are facing the complications of blindness, nerve damage and amputations. I believe that if every single person with type 1 diabetes had access to the medications they need in order to survive, the overall burden on the health care system would be measurably reduced.
Personally, I've had those scares when talking to an expert about what my eyesight will look like in 10 or 20 years. I can be more comfortable knowing that my eyesight is being protected and that I'm not going to have to face permanent disability. Those are the kinds of things I look forward to if this bill comes into play.
I really do appreciate, Mr. Bleskie, your sharing your lived experience when it comes to the OHIP plan or OHIP+. As someone from Alberta, I'm not terribly familiar with Ontario's plan, so I did find that to be quite insightful.
I'm frustrated, in large part, that as we're studying this bill, we don't have the opportunity to hear from all the different provincial plans and to hear where those gaps are in particular, because I don't necessarily know whether those gaps are the same in every province.
By going down this path, are we potentially solving a problem that might not exist equally across the provinces and creating a situation in which we are going to reward provinces that have done very little and perhaps don't provide that? That would therefore raise the question of whether provinces would continue to offer these kinds of plans if they were to not do this. It becomes this very circular question of creation and complications.
Mr. Giroux, when you put forward your prescription costings in your most recent budget, did you factor in the record-breaking inflation we're facing in the future costings?
:
I mean, I hear you. We want to make effective use of public dollars and we want the money to get to places where it is needed most, but the aim of the program, of the legislation, is not just to provide medication to Canadians; it's also to get the price of drugs lower. We have to get the price down.
Again, it's no surprise to hear criticism of bulk purchasing in the discussion today from certain quarters that don't want that, but I think Canadians do. Our health care system does. Right now we spend as much on drugs in our health care system as we do on doctors. In fact, only hospitals are the next higher up. We have to get the overall price of drugs down to a lower level. That will require a coordinated bulk buying strategy.
You know, not all provinces pay the same amount for pharmaceuticals. There are different arrangements that are made. As Mr. Giroux mentioned in his very interesting October 2023 report, increased transparency from a bulk buying strategy will help lower the costs to everybody, because all provinces will get the same price, as opposed to one—
:
Thank you for the question.
I should clarify. I'm here today representing the off-patent industry—the generic and biosimilar industry. We fill 75% of prescriptions for about 20% of the costs, so 80% of the costs don't go through the companies that we represent here today.
However, as I have said twice already, we have a national system on pricing. Quebec participated in the latest round of negotiations for the first time. It is a national system. All provinces pay the same price. All payers in Canada pay the same price for generic medicines. When I say that we don't like bulk buying, I think we already have a national system that's negotiated with experts who run drug programs, leading to low prices, and that's what we want.
We are concerned with terms like “bulk buying” if it implies that there's going to be some attempt to drive pricing down lower. Countries like New Zealand are bulk buying. When we look at the data, we see that fewer drugs are available there than elsewhere, so that's not a system that we recommend. We have worked very hard with the pCPA, with the provinces, and the three federal drug plans to get a system, and we think that system should be respected.
:
Right. Great. Thanks for that.
When we begin to look at this, we see that it's a small fraction of the medications out there. That's not to say that the medications for diabetes and contraception are not important; certainly they are. As a former family doctor, I wrote lots of prescriptions for both of those medications.
I know you don't have a crystal ball, Monsieur Giroux, but when we look at the costs of other medications that are currently coming down the pipeline, they're significantly more. They're thousands or hundreds of thousands of dollars.
What might that look like? To me, it's a catastrophic number. It's $5.7 billion multiplied by hundreds of thousands. Is that a fair estimate?
I'll continue my line of questioning.
Mr. Frank, you know that Quebec has had a pharmacare program for close to 30 years now. It's a good thing. We want other people in Canada to be able to have the same thing, if governments want to draw inspiration from it.
In Quebec, people have to pay a deductible ranging from $0 to $731, depending on their income. I'm trying to understand, from your point of view, the functionality of the program we're talking about right now. How can the plan work with a $0 deductible on the first dollar, keeping the same range of drugs, plus the possibility of adding innovative drugs? How do you see the situation?
Apparently, certain members from Quebec didn't understand what I said, so I will repeat it. A coalition representing nearly two million Quebeckers put out a statement today. All the major unions—from the Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec, the Table des regroupements provinciaux d'organismes communautaires et bénévoles and the Union des consommateurs to the Centrale des syndicats démocratiques, the Confédération des syndicats nationaux and the Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Québec—pointed out in their brief that the current pharmacare program in Quebec has failed to ensure that everyone has reasonable and equitable access to drugs. The organizations go on to say that the various charges people have to pay for prescription drugs are actually user fees that serve to deter people, causing them to skip doses or go without their medications because they can't afford them.
My question is for the Canadian Health Coalition representatives.
According to two million Quebeckers, Quebec's public-private system is broken. What does it mean when people tell us that the system is working, that things are fine and that the government should continue to fund the hybrid system instead of establishing universal pharmacare?
:
Thank you for the question.
Who is it fine for? That is what we have to talk about. Is it fine for Canadians?
Clearly, we hear that people in Quebec are not happy with the system they have. Talk to one of the leading health economists, Steve Morgan from the University of British Columbia. He ran the numbers. He says that Quebeckers are paying for drug medication in one of the highest-cost jurisdictions in the world. In fact, per capita, they're only topped by the United States. They pay more than Switzerland. In fact, if that system in Quebec were translated to other provinces, costs would actually increase because of the problems in the system.
I take the word of experts and health economists who looked at the Quebec model very closely. Listen to what people are saying. Is that the system we want to have for the rest of the country, or do we want to go with the kind of single-payer national universal system envisioned in Bill?
:
I call the meeting back to order.
I'd like to welcome our final panel of witnesses for this evening. Under the programming motion that is guiding us through these proceedings, we are not to sit past 8:30, and I'd like to wrap up a little before 8:30 so that we can pass the budget, just to give you an idea of the timeline.
We extend a big welcome to the witnesses who have joined us here this evening. We have, from the Canadian Pharmacists Association, Joelle Walker, vice-president, public and professional affairs.
We welcome, from the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, Manuel Arango, vice-president, policy and advocacy. From the National Indigenous Diabetes Association Incorporated, we have Céleste Thériault, executive director; and from the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada, we welcome Dr. Diane Francoeur, chief executive officer.
You're probably aware that opening statements are five minutes in length and are given in the order in which you're listed on the notice of meeting, so we're going to begin with the Canadian Pharmacists Association.
Ms. Walker, welcome to the committee. You have the floor.
:
Mr. Chair and members of the committee, thank you.
We are pleased to have the opportunity to share our views on Bill .
I will be giving my opening remarks in English, but I would be glad to answer questions in either English or French.
[English]
Our testimony tonight is really aimed at providing the committee with a very practical perspective on what could happen at the pharmacy counter as changes are contemplated and considered as part of the legislation. My testimony will focus on three points.
The first is around the role of pharmacists in pharmacare. As anyone who has used a prescription drug will know, the pharmacist is the last person the patient will see before they get their medications. While the act of dispensing is complex, pharmacists do a lot more than simply fill prescriptions and sell medications; they provide critical care and counselling that are integral to the effective use of medications. Their daily interactions with patients place them in a unique position to understand their needs, educate them on proper medication use and advise on potential drug interactions. Pharmacare really should not be just about the cost of the drugs, but also the care that goes along with them.
Pharmacists also play a significant role in drug plan management and navigation, and that's not often seen by many patients. Every day, they submit millions of claims on behalf of their patients, they spend time on the phone with insurance plans and they help patients identify alternative treatment options that are covered by their plans. For this reason, it's essential that we have a pharmacist on the government's proposed committee of experts.
The second point I'd like to make is around how best to target medication coverage. Contraceptive and diabetes medications are two very important drug classes, and there's no doubt about that. There's also no doubt that there are too many people in Canada who don't have access to these drugs for cost-related reasons.
However, the focus of Bill , which aims to provide free contraceptive and diabetes medications to all Canadians, irrespective of their existing coverage, could warrant reconsideration. The intent of reducing the burden of these drugs is the right one, but our view is that the projected cost of over a billion dollars could provide even more comprehensive coverage if directed toward expanding coverage for a broader range of medications for those who currently lack adequate coverage, rather than replacing coverage for those with existing drug plans. We believe such an approach would be more feasible, fit better with the needs of provinces and limit disruptions, all while ensuring universal coverage for all.
That brings me to my third and last point. While change is sorely needed to ensure universal pharmacare, the potential for significant disruption can't be overstated. As members of this committee can likely attest from the recent changes to the PSHCP, or Public Service Health Care Plan, changing drug plans can be very disruptive for plan members and for pharmacists. Switching patients from a private drug plan to a public drug plan can be equally disruptive, so changes must be implemented carefully to avoid confusion and reduce administrative burden.
The reality is that public drug plans across Canada are far less comprehensive than private plans, which means that if the legislation shifts patients from their private plans to a public plan, pharmacists and physicians will likely have to spend a considerable amount of time switching patients to new therapies, especially if their drug is no longer covered under a public plan; filling out paperwork to get special exemptions; and communicating these changes to patients.
In conclusion, I'd like to provide a personal example. I'm on a birth control pill that is not on the current list proposed by the federal government, and it took me three years to find the pill that worked for me and didn't have side effects that I would have had to live with daily as a woman.
This raised some very real questions for me when I looked at the intent of the bill. Will my employer continue to cover contraceptives if that's not covered? I'll certainly lobby for it, but it's definitely a question in my mind. Will my pharmacy continue to stock products that aren't broadly covered? If there are exemptions, will my pharmacist have to apply for that exemption on my behalf, as they often do with many drug plans?
I hope this gives you a sense of frontline issues that could arise.
I thank you and welcome your questions.
Heart and Stroke applauds the Government of Canada and Parliament for introducing Bill , which will lay the groundwork for equal access to life-saving drugs for all.
People in Canada appreciate our universal health care system, but the reality is that Canada is the only country with medicare that does not include prescription drugs as part of its universal health care program. The current patchwork of public and private plans in Canada has created fragmented drug access, leaving millions struggling to afford their prescription medications. I don't think there's any disagreement with this.
While many people in Canada have some form of drug coverage, it is often insufficient and poses affordability issues. The 2019 Hoskins report indicated very clearly that 7.5 million people in Canada had either no coverage or insufficient drug coverage.
As well, the 2021 survey on access to health care and pharmaceuticals during the pandemic found, once again, that one in five people did not have insurance to cover any of the cost of their prescription medications in the previous year.
Furthermore, a poll commissioned by the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Cancer Society in 2024 found that one in five people in Canada do not have sufficient prescription drug coverage. One in four had to make difficult choices to afford prescription drugs, such as cutting back on groceries; delaying paying rent, mortgage or utility bills; and incurring debt. The same poll also found that one person in 10 in Canada who had been diagnosed with a chronic health condition was more likely to visit the ER due to a worsening health issue because they were not able to afford their prescription medications.
A study in 2016 also found that 16% of people in Canada went without medication for heart disease, cholesterol and high blood pressure because of cost.
With the introduction of this bill, the foundation is being laid for the first phase of national universal pharmacare through single-purchaser coverage of diabetes and contraceptive medications. This will ultimately provide equal drug coverage for all people in Canada, regardless of their gender, race, geography, age or ability to pay.
We do feel that this needs to be expanded in the future to cover drugs for heart disease and stroke. The reality is that millions of people in Canada live with heart disease and rely on daily prescription medicines to help keep them alive and to manage their conditions at home. In fact, in 2022, 105 million prescriptions were dispensed for cardiovascular diseases, making it the second-highest disease category for prescriptions.
Universal coverage of essential medicines will reduce pressure on the health system by cutting costs, because treating a condition such as high blood pressure, which is a leading risk factor for stroke, is more cost-effective for our health care system than the specialized care required to save a life after a stroke.
The Heart and Stroke Foundation has made a number of recommendations for amendments in its submission, but I would like to highlight one today. It pertains to subclause 8(1), regarding a national formulary.
We recommend that a definition be inserted here for “essential medicines”. In particular, essential prescription drugs should initially be defined as those included in the CLEAN meds trial. That's one way to define essential medicines.
We feel that the government must take quick action to close the gap in coverage that leaves out essential medicines for chronic diseases, including heart disease and stroke, that affect many in Canada. We also recommend that the minister prioritize the signing of bilateral agreements with provinces and territories in tandem with the progression of the bill and to pass this bill before the House adjourns for the summer.
Finally, I would like to address some other key points and misinformation about pharmacare. The reality is that the federal government, as a single drug purchaser, would be able to negotiate much lower prices compared to the myriad private and public plans. This would have a significant deflationary impact on the average drug price.
We heard comments earlier on about bulk purchasing. It's very well known in the world of business procurement that a company that buys 100,000 widgets from a manufacturer is going to get a much better price per widget than is a company that buys five widgets per year from the manufacturer. The reality of bulk purchasing and the fact that it leads to lower prices is well known throughout the world. In New Zealand and Australia, with respect to drug purchasing, or even just in general if you look at Costco, bulk purchasing leads to lower prices.
Another point is the notion that coverage is going to be decreased through a national pharmacare program. In fact, it's going to be the opposite. We're going to get enhanced coverage. The reality is that we have 7.5 million people who have no coverage or inadequate coverage. The objective is to increase coverage for those people. It's just not a reality that we're going to get reduced coverage. If the government, the federal payer, is covering a diabetes generic drug, whether that's in the private plan, the public plan or the federal plan, it doesn't matter: It's going to be covered one of those three ways. I don't foresee a reduction in potential coverage. It's the opposite. We're aiming for the opposite.
To conclude, the Heart and Stroke Foundation applauds the federal government and Parliament for the introduction of this legislation and for proposing an affordable plan that will give 7.5 million uninsured and under-insured people access to prescription drugs for diabetes and contraception. We really hope that in the future this can be increased and expanded. As my colleague mentioned, I think we do want an expansion of this formulary in the future, but this is a good start.
Thank you very much.
Good evening, everyone. My name is Céleste Thériault and I'm the executive director of the National Indigenous Diabetes Association, located on Treaty No. 1 lands in Winnipeg, Manitoba. It's an honour and a real privilege to be speaking about this bill in front of you as it relates to indigenous people in Canada.
I'll talk a bit about the National Indigenous Diabetes Association. We refer to ourselves as NIDA, and we're a charitable, non-profit, member-led organization established in 1995 as a grassroots initiative by women on the side of Lake Winnipeg who were advocating because diabetes was taking too much from their people. That was almost 30 years ago. It is inclusive of first nations, Inuit and Métis in Canada.
This bill really provides the beginnings of a comprehensive pharmacare program for all Canadians and represents a significant step towards addressing social health inequities across Canada, including within indigenous populations.
I may refer to indigenous people—first nations, Métis and Inuit—with a pan-indigenous term to represent them, but they are distinct nations with distinct interests. They suffer disproportionately from socio-economic constraints and illnesses, but they stand to benefit substantially from the provision of much-needed diabetes care, especially Métis individuals who are not covered under NHIB, the current non-insured health benefits program, and so the current government of the day is really commended for this first step and for including diabetes medication in that first step.
That said, we should be continuing to do this in a good way. What does that mean?
It means talking with indigenous nations, political leaders and individuals with lived experience to make sure that no one gets left behind. We know changes that affect indigenous people in Canada should be done with us—“nothing about us without us”, and I would like to mention that because of the short period for big decisions between the tabling of the bill and this consultation, we didn't have adequate time to consult all of our members of interest on the implications of the bill. Our organization by no means can talk on behalf of all indigenous nations across Canada, so there should be continuous and ongoing meaningful dialogue with many indigenous people and nations, especially with our political leaders. The Minister of Health talked about not only provincial and territorial governments but also our indigenous governments, which have some sovereign right to having their voices heard on this legislation.
It's vital that we roll out this new program very carefully and really consider the context of the existing benefits, particularly through NIHB, the non-insured health benefits, which presently are the right of status first nations and Inuit beneficiaries in Canada and provide for medications for the treatment of diabetes and for other pharmacological care. However, it's not all of them, and that is to the detriment of the individual.
It also remains unclear whether the NIHB and the new pan-Canadian pharmacare program will be responsible for providing medication coverage to these individuals. However, the minister said earlier today, all the programs would kind of remain in place, so we believe that would be helpful.
The coverage of medications for first nations and Inuit can be bureaucratically burdensome, and we know this. Individuals and health care providers on reserve are already administratively overwhelmed, so we need to ensure that the policy is reducing those burdens and that our providers can directly impact patients and deliver patient care in a good way. We don't need to burden them with getting their patients' medications covered.
We also want to make sure there's a comprehensive list of medications, allowing both the prescriber and the patient to be advocates in the health care journey of diabetes management. Of course, we want to steer away from a two-tiered health care system, where the best and strongest medications are only available to those with deep pockets, privilege, and secure employment with strong health benefits.
Similarly, we want to ensure that no indigenous person is left behind, because Métis individuals are not included in the NIHB. This bill means that Métis will have much greater access to care through this bill. We have to remember that when we walk forward in this legislation. We need to be at the bare minimum of equal or better than current coverage for all indigenous people in Canada.
We must make sure that we are working together to ensure that there is equal access to brand name medications for diabetes care when the generics are not available, again supporting timely access and ease of use for indigenous people so that those living with diabetes can keep their healthy blood flowing now and several generations from now.
As an indigenous woman, I would be remiss if I missed the opportunity to also comment on the contraceptives. As someone who had to use three IUDs to get my last one successfully put in, I know IUDs are quite expensive, and that would be not have been possible for me had I not had some support in place to be able to do that and make that a reality. All indigenous people need to be able to access whatever form of contraception need and to to determine what is best for their own person, and the funding should be provided for each of those types, without exceptions, just as it should be with diabetes care, as it is an extremely personal journey.
We look forward to a Canada where first nations, Métis and Inuit have equitable access to life-saving medications, although more consultation is required to move forward in a good way. We invite further collaboration on this vital project to ensure that no one is left behind. We want to ensure that everyone, from our indigenous elders to our youth to our lived-experience people in indigenous nations to governments and politicians, is adequately involved in the decision-making process of this bill, not just, as I said, our provinces and territories.
Let's continue to work together in a good way to ensure that we are raising health outcomes for all indigenous people in Canada and representing a significant step forward in addressing social health inequities across Canada—
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee.
My name is Dr. Diane Francoeur. I am a practising obstetrician and gynecologist, as well as the chief executive officer of The Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada.
I am here today to discuss the aspect of Bill that proposes to offer universal coverage of a full range of contraceptives for Canadian women. Specifically, I wish to highlight why this measure is important and long overdue; why it's not just a women's issue or a nice-to-have measure but a necessary economic policy that benefits all of society; and why we hope that you, as legislators, will ensure that coverage of all forms of birth control is included in the final bill and that the bill passes without any undue delay.
Today, somewhere in Canada, a woman will have to choose between buying groceries, paying her electrical bill, filling up her gas tank or paying for her birth control. It's no secret that the rising costs of almost all goods and services have become a significant burden for many Canadians. However, nine million women of childbearing age in Canada bear the additional cost of preventing unintended pregnancy, a basic need that often flies under the radar but that is no less fundamental to the way of life of millions of Canadian women.
Contraception allows women to plan their lives, their families and their pregnancies. They are more likely to finish school. They participate more fully in the workforce. They enjoy more economic stability and they have healthy pregnancies when they do choose to have children.
Canadian women spend, on average, 30 years of their lives shouldering the associated cost of trying to avoid a pregnancy, but financial barriers can limit birth control options for many women, as you so rightly said.
Canada currently has a patchwork of coverage for contraceptives, which varies according to income and where you live. This forces some women to choose the cheapest method, and not necessarily the most effective or best method for their bodies. In some cases, they may not be able to afford any birth control at all. This can result in an unintended pregnancy. I see this every week in my practice.
We can do better than that for Canadian women. Approximately 40% of pregnancies in Canada are still unintended. This doesn't impact only women and their families, but also the economy. The direct cost of unintended pregnancies in Canada is estimated to be at least $320 million per year, a figure that doesn't include the downstream cost to society or to parents. The B.C. modelling indicates that the health system will save $5 for every dollar it invests in contraception every year.
We urge you, as legislators, to ensure that Bill passes smoothly and without undue delay.
To fully implement the commitments in this bill, Ottawa will need to negotiate agreements with the provinces and territories, which will take time. Any parliamentary holdup would only force women to wait longer for this much-needed assistance. Already, my patients, my neighbours and my nurses with whom I practice every day have been asking me when this coverage will become available, because it's never soon enough for those in difficult economic situations.
We also urge you to ensure that the final version of the bill and any budget measures attached to it include coverage of a full range of contraceptives, including the pill, the patch, the ring, the IUDs, the shot and the implant. By ensuring that all options are available, nine million women in Canada will no longer be forced to make decisions about their family planning based on their income.
Thank you.
Thank you, everybody, for being here at this late hour and on such short notice. It's greatly appreciated.
I think that's part of what Canadians want to see—true conversations and discussions of what this piece of legislation says and what this piece of legislation means. Canadians want to be able to decipher it in such a way that the average person watching this evening can understand what is going on and the challenges that we have.
To you, Ms. Thériault, thank you very much for your comments and your insight.
In my past life, before I became a member of Parliament, I was a consultant for the FNIHB, the First Nations and Inuit Health Branch, so I'm aware of things along the lines of providing health care services to first nations through different avenues. I'm wondering if you could explain that to those watching who don't understand, because FNIHB is covered by the Government of Canada.
What could you say on the coverage for diabetes and other coverages that might be available?
Ms. Walker, thank you very much. I have huge respect for the pharmacists I have, my own personal pharmacists, because of the advice that they provide.
A lot of Canadians don't understand the knowledge base that they have. Oftentimes they are much more knowledgeable on all medications, more perhaps than even the doctor who's providing that information. I don't mean that disrespectfully; it's just that you spend four years studying to become a pharmacist.
Your comment about the expert committee, I find, is very discerning about this piece of legislation, because it doesn't clearly define what that committee will be. It doesn't say how many people will be on that committee. It doesn't say what their role will be or what qualifications they need to have. Your comment about having a pharmacist on it I think is very important. I wonder if you could expand on that.
I think it's very natural to think of your pharmacist first and foremost as the person who's managing your medication treatments on an ongoing basis. They really can provide a very practical, real-life view of what any changes would propose.
Whether the legislation goes in any particular direction, the end result is it's going to be an interaction between the pharmacist and the patient at the pharmacy counter. The pharmacist needs to be able to explain what the change is and why the change has been made.
Depending on the spectrum of the changes that are considered, changing millions of people from different programs could be hugely challenging, just from a logistics and burden perspective. Having somebody like that on a committee would be essential.
Thank you to the witnesses for coming.
I want to follow up on what Dr. Kitchen talked about.
I want to also thank you for advocating for pharmacists. One of my very good friends, my mentors, and the one whom I trust with all of my medication, is Akil Dhirani, who's running many practices. I often go to him for advice on many things, especially around pharmacare.
I'll ask you a very simple question. I believe you are familiar with the health care plan that we have. If I develop type 1 diabetes, what would be the scenario today for me? What would be the difference between today versus tomorrow, when this bill passes? What would it be when I go to Akil and say, “Akil, now I have type 1 diabetes, but insulin is universally available now. What change would I see in treatment? What change should I anticipate from my insurance provider?”
:
It really depends a little bit on the treatment that you're currently using. We certainly fielded an enormous number of questions from pharmacists when the PSHCP transition was made, because there were changes that affected patients.
Some members might be familiar with one of the biggest ones, which was compliance packaging for elderly people. That was a service that was provided with an understanding from the pharmacist and the physician that was noted in the file, but now the patient has to apply, go into their paperwork and get a response back from the plan provider. I'm illustrating that just to mention that there can be additional processes to go through.
The difference might be that if you're on a drug that isn't currently envisioned on the list, such as a GLP-1, the question will be whether your current plan will cover that and pick that up.
We're also very familiar with the challenge that employers will be looking to cut the costs of their plans. If a drug class is already covered, they may look to reduce those costs so that they can invest in other areas of their plans. Those are the questions that we would ask.
If you're not currently covered.... This is sort of what happened with some people. In Ontario, the OHIP+ program for kids was introduced, and pharmacists had to do a lot of triaging of patients who had lost coverage for a particular drug and had to apply for special exemptions. That just adds to the burden that's already existed on a very pressured profession and health care system at the moment.
With my remaining time, I would like go to The Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada.
I'm developing an understanding of the many different contraceptives that are available and how they best fit, depending on the situation. I think you touched on this, but can you give a sense of, or explain further, the fact that this current scope is covering a broad range of contraceptives and supporting products?
I think the IUD was mentioned as one of the items in the first panel. Can you expand on how this is helping Canadians, especially women who want to have the choice to be able to plan their lives better?
:
Absolutely. Thank you for this question, because it's really, really important. I'll give you two quick examples that are easy to understand.
In 2006, I was president of the obstetrics and gynecology society of Quebec, and we made a presentation to the government to have the hormonal IUD covered. That was a long time ago, in 2006, and in other provinces it's still not covered. These methods have made an amazing change in the teenage pregnancy rate, because they are very, very effective. Once the IUD is there, it's there to stay. Now we can leave it there for up to seven years, unless the woman wants to remove it.
Every one of these methods has some advantages and some side effects that sometimes adolescents or women don't like. That's why having all medication covered will really help us fit the need.
As you said, now I have a Canadian position, and my heart is broken when I hear that, because since 2006 we've been putting in IUDs, and women are happy. There's a decreased rate of hysterectomies. There are a lot of good side effects, like decreased bleeding. It changes women's lives.
That's a good example of what needs to be done.
If pharmacists didn't need to monitor the medications people were taking or if their advice wasn't useful, drugs would be sold on store shelves, with no follow-up.
It's important to recognize that the work pharmacists do when they provide patients with prescription drugs is quite complex. They check for drug interactions. It is thanks to pharmacists that patients can be sure they are taking the right drugs. That is the kind of care I was talking about.
It is a pharmacist's job to review the list of medications that a person is taking. For example, if an elderly patient is taking multiple medications, the pharmacist has to make sure that the drugs are accurately listed in the patient's file. They have to do that for all patients. More and more pharmacists are providing those types of primary care services in pharmacies. That is part of the care that pharmacare involves.
:
It will have consequences for every facet of the industry. It will depend on the details.
First, I talked a bit about the fact that pharmacists will have to spend a lot of time communicating these changes, given how significant they are.
Second, the government's cost projections should capture the cost of closing the coverage gap between the public plan and private plans. It's also important to make sure that pharmacists continue practising their profession and are compensated for all the counselling they provide.
The difference between a public plan and a private one can be quite significant. For instance, Ontario's dispensing fees are quite low as compared with the national average. If everyone took up that model, it would have a major impact on pharmacies, especially independent pharmacies and rural ones.
Thank you to the witnesses for their input, which is extremely useful.
Quebec's current drug insurance plan, a hybrid public-private system, has come up a number of times. Recently, a major coalition representing two million Quebeckers called on Parliament to pass Bill .
The coalition is made up of all the major unions in Quebec, from the Fédération de la santé et des services sociaux and provincial groups to the Union des consommateurs. In its brief, the coalition states that the current pharmacare program in Quebec has failed to ensure that everyone has reasonable and equitable access to drugs. It also states that the various charges people have to pay for prescription drugs are actually user fees that serve to deter people, causing them to skip doses or go without their medications because they can't afford them. Higher drug costs are putting more strain on private plans, and as a result, workplaces are terminating their insurance plans and workers are losing all their coverage.
Quebec's system is broken, and these organizations are asking us to pass the bill quickly.
Under hybrid systems, many people can't afford to get the drugs they need. When it comes to women having control over their own reproductive health, Dr. Francoeur, what does it mean to have a universal, as opposed to a hybrid, system?
:
The major benefit is that it takes money out of the equation. In other words, it gives us the opportunity to discuss the benefits of the plan for a specific individual. We want the same model as the one implemented in British Columbia. That said, patches weren't included in that province's model.
If a person has been through bariatric surgery and has issues with their intestines or with taking a medication, they can't use a pill, because it may be less effective. With a patch, the medication enters the body directly. It's much more reliable. This example explains why it's sometimes necessary to choose one method over another.
Our president, Dr. Amanda Black, conducted a study of young Ontarians aged 20 to 29. It clearly showed that unwanted pregnancies were associated with methods that failed to meet the needs of young people. When young women wanted implants, they couldn't have them. When they asked for an IUD, they were told that another method was covered by the plan.
I'm from Quebec. I'm obviously familiar with the province's drug coverage. It's better than nothing. However, it isn't true that everything is free. Young girls who don't want their parents to know about their pill use have no choice. They must report everything. It isn't true that everyone will be covered. If the girls are covered by their parents' insurance, their parents will have access to a statement. Unfortunately, this often constitutes just another step to protect them against an unwanted pregnancy that will change their adult lives.
[English]
Mr. Arango, I want to come to you. All of your testimony was very important.
I was particularly touched by your speaking about heart and stroke and the 600 Canadians who die every year because they can't afford to pay for their medication. What I hear you saying is that we can't stop with diabetes medication and contraception: We have to move as quickly as possible to cover heart disease medication and medication that prevents strokes.
I know of constituents who are paying $1,000 a month for heart medication that keeps them alive. They have to make that difficult choice every day: Do I put food on the table and keep this roof over our family's head, or do I stay alive?
What impact would it have if universal pharmacare were extended to all the medication that the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the research prescribe for people with heart and stroke issues?
:
It would be very significant, because in fact 16% of the 1.6 million people that live with heart disease and stroke cannot afford these drugs.
What they end up doing is splitting pills, skipping doses, not renewing their prescription or not even filling the prescription in the first place. Of course, if they don't have proper access to those drugs, they end up going to the ER, and then it's much more expensive to treat.
I understand that Rome was not built in a day and this first step won't cover necessarily CVD drugs, cardiovascular disease, but in the future, we would like to have that covered.
I should mention as well, though, that someone with diabetes has a threefold increase in their risk of dying from heart disease. Diabetes is an important comorbidity for heart disease and stroke. Addressing that as a first step is really key.
If I may, I really would like to address the point regarding the potential threat that's been raised of loss of coverage through private and provincial plans.
The reality is that if the federal government is providing a generic diabetes drug, I do not believe that the person who needs that drug is going to care whether it comes from a private plan, a provincial plan or a federal payer. As long as they get that generic drug, they're going to be happy, in my opinion.
Of course, they would be very concerned if we had brand name drugs that address adverse effects for them being removed from the private plan or the provincial plan. I can't see that happening. The demand would be really great to have that brand drug coverage in those private and provincial plans, so I don't think it's a very realistic scenario that those drugs are going to disappear.
:
Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to all the witnesses for being here. I really appreciate your testimony.
I'm going to start with Dr. Francoeur. Thank you for being here.
One of the things I'm hearing a lot about in my constituency—I represent Ottawa Centre, here in downtown Ottawa—is contraceptives. This bill ensures that contraceptives are available for women and gender-diverse people who need them, and it takes that cost barrier away. I recently had a conversation with Planned Parenthood here in Ottawa as well, and they raised some really important issues.
From your experience, can you talk to us a bit about the importance of making contraceptives available in the way we are proposing, and the kinds of impacts it will have on the lives of women in Canada?
:
Thank you for that question.
We have been lucky, in that B.C. started earlier. They have been covering contraception for a year now. From all the good news we hear about it, it's obvious that it's making a change, so we're eager to know all the numbers and the results associated with this coverage.
Obviously, money is a big issue. We were talking about the Quebec model. As someone mentioned in a prior group, we see women delaying when they get just a part of it, because it's still a lot of money. Nothing is free. In Quebec, don't have any expectations: Nothing is free. They still have to pay for a part of it when they go on a monthly basis, and sometimes they wait. They postpone. They want to make sure that they are going to take all the medication at once so that they pay for just the minimal coverage.
All of these actions are a burden that makes contraception less effective and promotes unintended pregnancies, and there's a cost to that. There's a cost to the future of Canadian women, because we know that when young people have a baby at a younger age, they are more likely to stop going to school. This has an impact on all of us, because there's a cost associated with that, which we all pay.
:
Well, 15% to 20% of women have many problems related to their period. There could be a hemorrhage or bleeding problems that they experience. It could be endometriosis, with which they have pain. When they are using a hormonal contraceptive method, these symptoms are all alleviated. It's a good side effect of these drugs, and we can use them.
Unfortunately, sometimes they're not going to be able to afford them. In the last year, we have had a lot of new immigrant women who have not been covered by all of our refugee coverage, especially in Quebec. I can tell you that it is a burden. They have no money—none at all, not even to pay for the cheapest method they could get. An IUD is going to be at least $450 or $500. That's a lot of money. If you keep it for seven years, it's going to be cheaper, but it makes a big difference.
That's why we want to make sure these newcomers are going to be able to settle, learn the language, become Canadian and then plan their family and their pregnancy instead of being surprised by an unintended pregnancy because they were not able to afford the contraceptive they wanted.
Dr. Francoeur, thank you for joining us this evening. I would also like to thank you for your commitment to the health and well‑being of the people in our area. I know that you served for almost seven years as president of the Fédération des médecins spécialistes du Québec, and that you're now taking on new challenges. Congratulations on all your hard work.
I would like to understand the process that led to the proposed national pharmacare program. When you were president of the Fédération des médecins spécialistes du Québec, you supported the Quebec government's calls for increased health care transfers. The agreement reached with the federal government stipulated that it would cover 50% of the costs. However, it currently pays roughly 22% of the bill. We were realistic and reasonable. We asked the federal government to cover 35% of the costs. For Quebec, this meant an increase of about $6 billion. We received $900 million, which isn't even one sixth of the amount requested. In my opinion, this isn't enough.
A pharmacare program is being proposed. However, without increased health transfers, there isn't any hope of revolutionizing the system and solving all the problems. It seems that the next logical step is missing.
If the goal is to improve health care and provide a better pharmacare program, like our program in Quebec, shouldn't health transfers be increased?
:
It's important to note that I don't live with diabetes, although it affects many of my family members, and we are Red River Métis.
What I see in my personal family network is that we don't have type 1 diabetes—I did hear the testimony earlier today—but they do live mostly with type 2 diabetes. It's extremely hard to get a CGM device covered when you're a type 2 diabetic, by the way, but that's what we know is needed. If you get calloused fingers and you have a desk job and you're typing all day, you're able to monitor your blood sugar levels so that you have better in-range time.
We also see it with regard to insulin, because some people will ration insulin just to make sure they can put food on their table. I don't think that's a choice that people should have to make when it comes to their health. People should have access to the things they need in a timely manner so they can manage their health in the way they need to.
That's for Métis, non-status and status first nations, Inuit beneficiaries. It's all-encompassing.
:
I don't have that number handy, but I will share a couple of examples that might be helpful in your deliberations around Ozempic.
It's obviously not covered under the proposed list of medications. It's widely used. We've recently had a shortage of Ozempic across the country, and my association works very regularly to address shortages that are a growing problem in the country. When we talk about pharmacare, it's not just about the cost of drugs or the services that are being offered; if that medication is not available in the country, no amount of coverage is going to help that.
One thing that we've noted is that the number of available medications in each drug class can decrease significantly, depending on how many companies are in the market, and we are most vulnerable to drug shortages if only one or two manufacturers are producing a particular drug.
Let's say that there's a national disaster in one country that's producing some of the API, and the one company there can't produce that drug, and the other companies aren't able to readily increase their production. In cases like that, we've really suffered significantly with many drug shortages, so I think there's a really complicated ecosystem that this pharmacare approach needs to also recognize.
:
Yes. Certainly there will be a benefit to indigenous people. That's without a doubt.
To comment on your first question, we need to also ensure that we are making wholistic—with a “w”, for the note-takers—decisions around public policy that affects our health and doesn't look at just the pharmaceuticals and all those things. I know that we're here specifically for the pharmaceuticals, but there are so many other things that impact health, such as socio-economics and social determinants of health. I think this is the first step in the right direction for opening up the conversation and the dialogue to all those other sectors that this bill obviously does not cover.
Of course, indigenous people, if unfortunately their medication cannot be covered—and most likely they cannot afford to even take the medication—may not even get the prescription filled, as we know. I think that would be interesting data to look at. They will also make sure they feed their family first, or do whatever they might need to do first, before taking care of their own health. Often we're faced with that decision every day, that hard decision.
My chair often speaks very openly about the ideal type of diabetes treatment for her as a person living with type 2 diabetes in Alberta. It is currently not available to her because of the lack of coverage, and it simply would be way too expensive for her and her family of six children to afford. Therefore, it is just not an option. She has to look at other alternatives.
Thank you, Mr. Arango.
Thanks to all of our witnesses for being with us today and for your thoughtful and patient testimony.
Don't run away, colleagues. We have a budget to deal with.
A budget has been circulated for the work to be done on this study. You would have received it either earlier today or yesterday.
Is it the will of the committee to adopt the budget as presented?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: The budget is therefore adopted.
Is it the will of the committee to adjourn the meeting?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
We're adjourned.