keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34226053/associations-of-health-services-utilization-by-prescription-drug-coverage-and-immigration-category-in-ontario-canada
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Valentina Antonipillai, G Emmanuel Guindon, Arthur Sweetman, Andrea Baumann, Olive Wahoush, Lisa Schwartz
Canada is the only high-income country with a universal healthcare system that does not provide prescription drug coverage for all its residents. This study examines whether Canadians' prescription drug coverage status is associated with their health services use and how this association differs by gender across non-migrants and three categories of migrants: economic immigrants, family-class immigrants, and refugees. Very few studies have examined differences across these migrant groups, and there is a need to do so as they experience varying health disparities...
June 18, 2021: Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34162282/the-most-important-facilitators-and-barriers-to-the-use-of-health-technology-assessment-in-canada-a-best-worst-scaling-approach
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wiesława Dominika Wranik, Ronaldo-Raul Székely, Susanne Mayers, Mickaël Hiligsmann, Kei Long Cheung
BACKGROUND: Health technology assessment (HTA), which can support public drug reimbursement decisions will play a core function in the planned national Pharmacare program in Canada. To address existing barriers to the use of HTA, these must be ranked in order of priority.The goal of this study was to access the relative importance of known facilitators and barriers to the use of HTA in the context of the Canadian health care system, with attention to differences between regions and stakeholder groups...
June 24, 2021: Journal of Medical Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33964882/an-examination-of-three-prescribing-cascades-in-a-cohort-of-older-adults-with-dementia
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shanna C Trenaman, Susan K Bowles, Susan Kirkland, Melissa K Andrew
BACKGROUND: Prescribing cascades are a source of inappropriate prescribing for older adults with dementia. We aimed to study three prescribing cascades in older Nova Scotians with dementia using administrative databases. METHODS: Cohort entry for Nova Scotia Seniors' Pharmacare Program beneficiaries was the date of dementia diagnosis. Prescription drug dispensing data was extracted for inciting medication and second treatment (cholinesterase inhibitor and bladder anticholinergic, metoclopramide and Parkinson's disease medication, or calcium channel blocker (CCB) and diuretic) over the six-year period April 1, 2009 to March 31, 2015...
May 8, 2021: BMC Geriatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33958383/patterns-of-cost-related-medication-underuse-among-canadian-adults-with-cancer-a-cross-sectional-study-using-survey-data
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Omar Abdel-Rahman, Scott North
BACKGROUND: Cost-related medication underuse (CRMU) has been reported within the general population in Canada. In this study, we assessed patterns of CRMU among Canadian adults with cancer. METHODS: This is a cross-sectional study using survey data. We accessed data sets from the 2015/16 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) and reviewed the records of adults (≥ 18 yr) with a history of cancer who were prescribed medication in the previous 12 months. We collected information about sociodemographic features, health behaviours and CRMU, and conducted a multivariable logistic regression analysis for factors associated with CRMU...
April 2021: CMAJ Open
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33711186/the-effect-of-british-columbia-s-pharmacare-coverage-expansion-for-opioid-agonist-treatment
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natt Hongdilokkul, Emanuel Krebs, Xiao Zang, Haoxuan Zhou, Fahmida Homayra, Jeong Eun Min, Bohdan Nosyk
Opioid agonist treatment (OAT) is the evidence-based standard of care for people with opioid use disorder. In British Columbia, Canada, only social assistance registrants received full coverage for OAT prior to the introduction of the Pharmacare Plan G coverage expansion on February 1st, 2017. We aimed to determine the effect of the coverage expansion on OAT initiation, re-initiation, and retention. Using linked population-level data, we executed a difference-in-differences analysis to compare outcomes of individuals eligible for the additional coverage and social assistance registrants already receiving the most generous coverage for OAT prior to the policy change, adjusting for individual and prescriber characteristics...
March 12, 2021: Health Economics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33527903/canada-health-system-review
#26
REVIEW
Gregory P Marchildon, Sara Allin, Sherry Merkur
This analysis of the Canadian health system reviews recent developments in organization and governance, health financing, health care provision, health reforms and health system performance. Life expectancy is high, but it plateaued between 2016 and 2017 due to the opioid crisis. Socioeconomic inequalities in health are significant, and the large and persistent gaps in health outcomes between Indigenous peoples and the rest of Canadians represent a major challenge facing the health system, and society more generally...
November 2020: Health Systems in Transition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33194946/leading-causes-of-mortality-and-prescription-drug-coverage-in-canada-and-new-zealand
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nigel S B Rawson
Introduction: Canada may soon see the introduction of a national pharmaceutical insurance system. New Zealand has a government-funded healthcare system used by all residents that operates within a tight cost-containment budget. The objective of this analysis was to compare the main mortality causes in Canada and New Zealand and examine listings in current Canadian provincial public drug plans and the New Zealand national drug formulary. Materials and Methods: Age-standardized mortality rates from 2000 to 2015 and data on hospital discharges and average length of stay in hospital for Canada and New Zealand were obtained from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's website...
2020: Frontiers in Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33070836/complementary-medicines-advertising-policy-part-i-unethical-conduct-in-the-australian-market-before-july-2018
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Malcolm Vickers, Ken Harvey
ObjectiveThis study assessed the effects of complementary medicines advertising policy before major changes in 2018.MethodsThe study consisted of an analysis of Complaints Resolution Panel determinations from 1999 to 2018, Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) post-marketing surveillance data of listed products from 2014 to 2018 and a 2018 consumer survey.ResultsOver 1999-2018, one company, Pharmacare Laboratories (with its acquisition, Cat Media), repeatedly breached the Therapeutic Goods Advertising Code at a level threefold higher than that of any other company...
October 19, 2020: Australian Health Review: a Publication of the Australian Hospital Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32986870/impact-of-spironolactone-exposure-on-prostate-cancer-incidence-amongst-men-with-heart-failure-a-pharmacoepidemiologic-study
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brett M Hiebert, Bryan W Janzen, Rohan M Sanjanwala, Aldrich D Ong, Ross D Feldman, Julian O Kim
AIM: Aldosterone has been found to influence cancer cell growth, cell cycle regulation, and cell migration, including in prostate cancer cells. Spironolactone is an aldosterone antagonist used for managing chronic heart failure (HF) with known antiandrogenic effects. We examined the effect of spironolactone exposure amongst men with HF on the incidence of prostate cancer. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study utilized provincial clinical and administrative databases from the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy...
September 28, 2020: British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32702799/universal-pharmacare-redressing-social-inequities-in-the-canadian-health-system-a-response-to-recent-commentaries
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohammad Hajizadeh, Sterling Edmonds
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
July 18, 2020: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32610789/understanding-the-battle-for-universal-pharmacare-in-canada-comment-on-universal-pharmacare-in-canada
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marc-André Gagnon
Drug coverage in Canada is a patchwork; an inequitable inefficient and unsustainable patchwork with no coherence or purpose. Some people think that we can solve the problem by adding more patches, but the core of the problem is that it is a patchwork. For the working population, access to medicines is still organized as privileges offered by employers to their employees. Universal pharmacare would not only provide better access to needed prescription drugs, but also eliminate waste, ensure value-for-money and help improve drug safety and appropriate prescribing...
March 14, 2020: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32610786/separated-at-birth-the-politics-of-pharmacare-for-all-in-canada-and-medicare-for-all-in-the-united-states-comment-on-universal-pharmacare-in-canada
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carolyn Hughes Tuohy
Policy decisions about healthcare coverage in Canada and the United States in the 1960s placed two virtually identical systems on different evolutionary paths in the physician and hospital sectors. However, prescription drug coverage remained outside Canada's single-payer model, and employer-based coverage continued to be the norm for the workforce population, as is the case across the broad healthcare system in the United States. As a result the current debate about pharmacare in Canada mirrors in political microcosm the larger debate on universal health insurance among American Democrats...
March 7, 2020: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32610780/the-challenges-of-canadian-pharmacare-are-more-complicated-than-acknowledged-comment-on-pharmacare-in-canada
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kristina M L Acri Née Lybecker
This commentary considers two editorial pieces, written by Hajizadeh and Edmonds, and Lewis, which address universal pharmacare in Canada. The pieces focus on the social inequities of the existing system and the challenges of successful implementation. After identifying the significant strengths of both articles, this commentary then delves into the reasons why universal pharmacare may not be the solution, and identifies numerous thorny issues that will complicate the implementation of such a publicly funded program...
February 15, 2020: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32610770/it-s-time-to-finally-kill-the-zombies-comment-on-universal-pharmacare-in-canada
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joel Lexchin
The movement for a national pharmacare plan in Canada is growing, but at the same time the multinational pharmaceutical companies and their supporters are critical of such a move. The three major arguments that they make are that all that is needed is to "fill in the gaps," ie, cover those who currently are uninsured or underinsured, that private drug plans are superior to public ones because they cover a larger number of drugs and that Canada cannot afford pharmacare. This commentary examines each of these arguments and makes the case that none of them is valid and that it is time to get on with implementing pharmacare...
January 12, 2020: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32610769/national-pharmacare-in-canada-equality-or-equity-accessibility-or-affordability-comment-on-universal-pharmacare-in-canada-a-prescription-for-equity-in-healthcare
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nigel S B Rawson
Canada's federal government intends to take steps to implement national pharmacare so that all Canadians have prescription drug coverage they need at an affordable price. Relatively limited funds have so far been pledged to support national pharmacare, which raises the question: what kind of program is envisioned? Since the government has already introduced regulations intended to reduce new drug prices drastically, national pharmacare seems likely to be a basic system designed to assist low-income Canadians with accessing primary care medicines...
January 1, 2020: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32553741/what-happens-to-drug-use-and-expenditure-when-cost-sharing-is-completely-removed-evidence-from-a-canadian-provincial-public-drug-plan
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tracey-Lea Laba, Lucy Cheng, Heather C Worthington, Kimberlyn M McGrail, Fiona K I Chan, Muhammad Mamdani, Michael R Law
OBJECTIVES: The role of cost-sharing for medicines is under active policy discussion, including in proposals for value-based insurance design. To inform this debate, we estimated the impact of completely removing cost-sharing on medication use and expenditure using a quasi-experimental approach. METHODS: Fair PharmaCare, British Columbia's income-based public drug plan, includes a household out-of-pocket limit. Therefore, when one household member starts a long-term high-cost drug surpassing this maximum, cost-sharing is completely removed for other family members...
May 23, 2020: Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32296277/can-youth-get-the-contraception-they-want-results-of-a-pilot-study-in-the-province-of-quebec
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giuseppina Di Meglio, Jessica Yeates, Gillian Seidman
OBJECTIVES: Canadian contraceptive providers report many barriers to access to contraception, and perceive youth as particularly vulnerable to these barriers. This study explores Quebec youth's experience of obtaining contraception. METHODS: A convenience sample of Quebec youth (aged 14 to 21 years) participated in an online anonymous survey of their experiences obtaining contraception. Data were collected between June 1, 2016 and December 31, 2016. RESULTS: One hundred and five youth were eligible to participate...
April 2020: Paediatrics & Child Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32202091/universal-pharmacare-in-canada-a-prescription-for-equity-in-healthcare
#38
EDITORIAL
Mohammad Hajizadeh, Sterling Edmonds
Despite progressive universal drug coverage and pharmaceutical policies found in other countries, Canada remains the only developed nation with a publicly funded healthcare system that does not include universal coverage for prescription drugs. In the absence of a national pharmacare plan, a province may choose to cover a specific sub-population for certain drugs. Although different provinces have individually attempted to extend coverage to certain subpopulations within their jurisdictions, out-of-pocket expenses on drugs and pharmaceutical products (OPEDP) accounts for a large proportion of out-of-pocket health expenses (OPHE) that are catastrophic in nature...
March 1, 2020: International Journal of Health Policy and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32189975/pharmacare-in-canada-the-paediatric-perspective
#39
REVIEW
Tom McLaughlin, Geert 't Jong, Andrea Gilpin, Charlotte Moore Hepburn
Canada's drug insurance system is one of the most expensive in the world, yet millions of Canadians still struggle to access necessary medications. As a result, provincial, territorial, and federal governments are considering public pharmacare policy proposals to ensure that all Canadians can access the medications they need. Pharmacare policies offer an opportunity to prioritize children and youth, whose unique drug needs have long been neglected. Prescription drug use is common in this population, with approximately half of Canadian children and youth requiring at least one prescription in any given year...
March 2020: Paediatrics & Child Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31909577/determining-proton-pump-inhibitor-prescription-dispensing-patterns-and-adherence-to-stopp-criteria-for-nova-scotia-seniors-pharmacare-program-beneficiaries
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jillian H Carter, Ingrid S Sketris, Hala Tamim, Adrian R Levy, Joanne M Langley
BACKGROUND: Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are often prescribed potentially inappropriately. The screening tool of older person's potentially inappropriate prescriptions (STOPP) for therapeutic dose PPIs has been adapted to examine PPI discontinuation, dose reduction, or switching to Histamine-2 Receptor Antagonist (H2RA) after 60 days. OBJECTIVES: The objectives of the present study were to (1) describe the use of acid suppression therapy (PPIs and H2RAs) 60 and 90 days after a new PPI dispensing, (2) assess predictors of lack of adherence to adapted STOPP criteria for PPI use, and (3) assess PPI dispensing over time...
December 27, 2019: Journal of Population Therapeutics and Clinical Pharmacology
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