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41.
What to do? Both the Romanow commission and the Kirby committee on health care— to say nothing of reports from other experts — recommended the creation of a national drug agency. Instead of each province having its own list of approved drugs, bureaucracy, procedures and limited bargaining power, all would pool resources, work with Ottawa, and create a national institution.
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But “national” doesn’t have to mean that. “National” could mean interprovincial — provinces combining efforts to create one body.
Either way, one benefit of a “national” organization would be to negotiate better prices, if possible, with drug manufacturers. Instead of having one province — or a series of hospitals within a province — negotiate a price for a given drug on the provincial list, the national agency would negotiate on behalf of all provinces.
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[D] The problem is simple and stark: health-care costs have been, are, and will continue to increase faster than government revenues.
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