Liberals to create national drug agency as building block of pharmacare plan
OTTAWA — The federal Liberal government is promising a new agency to negotiate prescription drug prices for Canadians and try to drive down costs — a move billed as an “important step” on the path to an eventual national pharmacare plan.
In a sign of just how expensive pharmacare could be, the federal budget tabled Tuesday is also promising to spend $500 million a year, starting in 2022, to subsidize drugs that treat rare diseases.
The Liberal government said it intends to work with provinces, territories and other partners to develop the mandate for the national drug agency, with Health Canada to receive $35 million over four years starting in 2019-2020 to create an office to support the plan.
The budget, the government’s last before this fall’s federal election, also includes plans to create a national formulary — a list of drugs that have been evaluated for both efficacy and cost-effectiveness.