Saturday, December 6, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Diabetes Canada calls for federal government to reset pharmacare program

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2025 10:20 AM
  • Diabetes Canada calls for federal government to reset pharmacare program

Advocates for people with diabetes want the federal government to restructure what they see as a flawed pharmacare program.

Glenn Thibeault, executive director of government affairs with Diabetes Canada, says the new government has an opportunity to make improvements.

The previous Trudeau government budgeted $1.5 billion over five years for the first phase of pharmacare, which covers the cost of some diabetes medications and contraceptives for patients. 

That government signed deals with B.C., P.E.I., Manitoba and Yukon that account for more than 60 per cent of the money that's set aside. 

The Carney government is not committing to signing the remaining nine funding deals, saying that it's working with the provinces and territories to support them.

Thibeault says Diabetes Canada wants to see more medications covered and says future deals could target coverage for people who don't have private insurance.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Joerg Sarbach, File

MORE Health ARTICLES

Pandemic pushes expansion of 'hospital-at-home' treatment

Pandemic pushes expansion of 'hospital-at-home' treatment
As hospitals care for people with COVID-19 and try to keep others from catching the virus, more patients are opting to be treated where they feel safest: at home.

Pandemic pushes expansion of 'hospital-at-home' treatment

Pharmacists can give childhood shots, U.S. officials say

Pharmacists can give childhood shots, U.S. officials say
Pharmacists in all 50 states are now allowed to give childhood vaccinations under a new directive aimed at preventing future outbreaks of measles and other preventable diseases.

Pharmacists can give childhood shots, U.S. officials say

Trail of bubbles leads scientists to new coronavirus clue

Trail of bubbles leads scientists to new coronavirus clue
A doctor checking comatose COVID-19 patients for signs of a stroke instead stumbled onto a new clue about how the virus may harm the lungs -- thanks to a test that used tiny air bubbles and a robot.

Trail of bubbles leads scientists to new coronavirus clue

FDA blocks much-anticipated BioMarin hemophilia gene therapy

FDA blocks much-anticipated BioMarin hemophilia gene therapy
Investors fled drug developer BioMarin in droves on Wednesday, driving shares down by a third after U.S. regulators rejected the company’s potentially game-changing hemophilia A gene therapy over concerns it might not really be a one-and-done lifetime treatment.

FDA blocks much-anticipated BioMarin hemophilia gene therapy

Many steps needed for accurate COVID-19 test results

Many steps needed for accurate COVID-19 test results
A widely used coronavirus test is under scrutiny this week after federal health officials warned that it could deliver inaccurate results if laboratory technicians don't follow the the latest updates from the manufacturer.

Many steps needed for accurate COVID-19 test results

Has the coronavirus mutated in any significant way?

Has the coronavirus mutated in any significant way?
Has the coronavirus mutated in any significant way?

Has the coronavirus mutated in any significant way?