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How a National Drug Plan Can Boost the Canadian Economy

A 2013 EKOS poll showed that 78 per cent of Canadians are in favour of establishing a universal pharmacare program in Canada. In spite of self-serving lobby groups who insist that the current system is working well and should not be reformed, establishing a national drug plan is the best thing to do for patients, for employers, for employees, for taxpayers, and for the Canadian economy.
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Canadians pay among the highest costs per capita among OECD countries for prescription drugs, with one Canadian out of 10 unable to fill their prescriptions because of financial reasons.

According to the recently released study, A Roadmap to a Rational Pharmacare Policy in Canada, commissioned by the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (CFNU) there are two main reasons why prescription drug costs are so expensive in Canada. First, we have a fragmented system with multiple public and private drug plans. In a fragmented system, attempts to reduce costs normally result in shifting the cost somewhere else in the system. Although provincial public plans have managed to significantly reduce drug costs since 2010 by reducing the price of generics and by negotiating confidential agreements with drug companies, there have been significant cost increases in private plans as drug companies and pharmacists seek compensation for their losses from public plans.

Second, according to the study Canadians pay artificially inflated prices for both brand-name drugs and generics in order to support the national pharmaceutical sector. But this strategy has not delivered what was promised: namely, investment and employment in Canada. Studies show that paying higher prices for drugs does not result in a thriving pharmaceutical sector in the country. Numbers alone tell the story; employment in the Canadian brand-name pharmaceutical sector went from 22,332 employees in 2003 to 14,990 in 2012.

Instead of eliminating this failed strategy, the federal government's plan appears to be to allow drug companies to increase drug costs further by permitting the extension of patents via a trade agreement with Europe. The presumption is that the Canadian pharmaceutical sector will thrive again, and more jobs for Canadians will be created. This goes against all the evidence.

Around 60 per cent of Canadians are covered through private drug plans provided by their employer. The inability to contain drug costs in Canada has led to increased labour costs, making Canadian enterprises less competitive. The possibility of losing drug coverage also reduces labour mobility for employees.

Employee benefits now represent more than 10 per cent of gross payroll and drugs represent the highest single benefit cost component. According to a 2012 survey by the Conference Board of Canada, half of the employers questioned indicated that cost-containment of employee benefits was a "very important" issue on their radar, and 55 per cent considered that prescription drug coverage should be the focus of their next major strategic review.

Private health benefits in Canada are also tainted by the very high administration fees charged by for-profit Canadian insurance companies: one in every $6 on average for private plans compared to one in every $50 for public plans. The disproportionate premiums paid by employers and employees to insurance companies end up favoring the financial sector to the detriment of the real economy.

Canada is the only country in the world with a medicare system that excludes prescription drugs as if they are not part of the healthcare system. Yet the CFNU study demonstrates that if Canada implemented universal pharmacare for all Canadians without any out-of-pocket expenditures for patients, there would not only be greater access to prescription drugs for Canadians, but a potential savings up to $11.4 billion every year by decreasing drug costs and reducing administration fees. These results would be achieved by all levels of government working together to contain costs instead of working against each other by shifting costs elsewhere in the system.

Such savings would represent not only a significant decrease in labour costs for Canadian employers, it would also increase net disposable income for all employees. It would have the same effect as a significant tax cut to help boost the economy, while providing better access to care and greater labour mobility.

A 2013 EKOS poll showed that 78 per cent of Canadians are in favour of establishing a universal pharmacare program in Canada. Our policymakers have all the necessary tools to assume leadership on this issue. In spite of self-serving lobby groups who insist that the current system is working well and should not be reformed, establishing a national drug plan is the best thing to do for patients, for employers, for employees, for taxpayers, and for the Canadian economy.

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Things We Hate About Canadian Health Care
1. Finding a family doctor takes forever(01 of17)
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And then you end up on a wait list for two years.
2. Specialists and hospitals don't talk(02 of17)
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Which means your specialist might send you to a hospital with a long wait time instead of one with a short one.
3. Hospital parking is SO EXPENSIVE(03 of17)
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And nobody makes change inside.
4. Doctors are too busy(04 of17)
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And it always feels like they're rushing you out the door.
5. Friends with doctors in the family get better service(05 of17)
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They magically get appointments in two weeks instead of eight months.
6. We have to pay for drugs/dentists/vision care(06 of17)
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But we always forget and end up forgoing care or emptying the wallet.
7. And don't get us started on mental health coverage(07 of17)
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Which often isn't covered either.
8. Family doctors insist you can't use walk-in clinics(08 of17)
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Because they lose money every time you do. Why is the pay structure like this again?
9. Preventative care takes a backseat(09 of17)
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Even though it could help us save money.
10. Moving provinces is a nightmare(10 of17)
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We're supposed to have universal health care, but good luck figuring out the paperwork to get reimbursed for out-of-province care.
11. It costs money to get a sick note(11 of17)
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Why do we pay for you to scribble gibberish on a notepad? Feels like a hidden fee.
12. And to renew prescriptions over the phone(12 of17)
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Now I'm going to the office for no good reason. But the doctor will get paid, so the system will lose money on the transaction. Genius!
13. Doctors STILL HAVEN'T GONE DIGITAL(13 of17)
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Even after the eHealth scandal in Ontario.
Seriously, do they just hate computers?(14 of17)
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But even though things aren't perfect(15 of17)
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At least we'll always be better than them(16 of17)
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That is all(17 of17)
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