Access to medicine shouldn’t depend on your job

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Members of Parliament mulling options for publicly funding medications will likely take their sweet time. There’s no rush for them, because they already have the type of access to medications contemplated for other Canadians.

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Opinion

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 22/02/2018 (2801 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Members of Parliament mulling options for publicly funding medications will likely take their sweet time. There’s no rush for them, because they already have the type of access to medications contemplated for other Canadians.

While approximately three million Canadians don’t take medications as directed because of the cost, MPs and other lawmakers enjoy platinum medication plans for themselves and their families.

I’m glad our elected leaders have access to life-saving medications such as insulin and treatments for HIV-AIDS. It would be absurd to allow our leaders to die preventable deaths while holding elected office.

But it’s also absurd that most taxi drivers or daycare workers, for example, must either pay for medications or suffer. The consequences of untreated diabetes include heart attacks, strokes and death. Are we prepared to allow people who work as food servers, artists or small business owners to die from treatable conditions?

While we should celebrate the fact that Parliament is becoming more diverse, the House is still very different from the rest of the country. Twenty-six per cent of MPs are women — less than the number of low-income families headed by a woman in our country (34 per cent) and, of course, about half of the number it should be. We don’t have a clear tally of the self-reported ethnicities of MPs, but you can decide where you’re more likely to encounter racial diversity: on Parliament Hill or behind the counter of a fast-food restaurant (or in another low-wage job).

New Canadians can and do make it big here, but that’s not true for immigrants cut down in their prime by a stroke that could have been prevented by high-blood-pressure treatments.

Publicly funded medicine provisions for lawmakers could even delay needed policy changes. MPs and other lawmakers are insulated from our frayed patchwork system, where some people have public or private plans but others don’t.

Studies in the United States have shown that lawmakers who have children in private schools are less likely to vote for laws that support public schools. Canadian lawmakers may be slow to support publicly funded mediation access for all Canadians because they wouldn’t be affected by the change — their coverage is already great.

During the past 40 years, multiple reports have recommended public funding of medications. Witnesses who recently appeared before the parliamentary committee repeated overwhelming arguments for including medications in our publicly funded health system. According to surveys, Canadians overwhelmingly reject the idea that your access to medications should depend on your job.

People understandably worry about taxes going up if medications are publicly funded. But, in fact, we’re already paying more than $1,000 per person in Canada, or a total of $30 billion per year, on medications. Government spending represents 40 per cent of that whopping amount and the rest is insurance fees and out-of-pocket charges.

We should be able to publicly fund the most important essential medicines for every person in Canada for the amount we’re paying now. Bulk purchasing should reduce prices per pill the way it has in countries that are smaller than Canada, such as Sweden and New Zealand. We wouldn’t need to pay for both public and private administrative systems for medications and the drug budget wouldn’t end up as profit for insurance companies.

The World Health Organization has created a model list of essential medicines that more than 100 countries have adapted to their own circumstances. We could do the same in Canada and that list could be the basis for an equitable publicly funded medication policy.

There are two ways to level the playing field between lawmakers and everyone else.

We could publicly fund essential medications for everyone in Canada, just like we publicly fund essential health-care services, such as seeing a doctor or having an X-ray.

Or we could give lawmakers the same medication coverage plans as food servers and see whether that speeds up their deliberations about publicly funding medications.

Nav Persaud is an expert adviser with evidencenetwork.ca, a physician and scientist in Toronto and an assistant professor at the University of Toronto.

— Troy Media

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