Tuesday, May 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Removes Prescription Drug Deductibles For Low-income Residents

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jan, 2019 10:25 PM
  • B.C. Removes Prescription Drug Deductibles For Low-income Residents

VANCOUVER — Health Minister Adrian Dix says British Columbia has taken a "long overdue step forward" to help lower-income households handle the cost of prescription drugs.


Dix says deductibles and other payments have been eliminated for 240,000 families, meaning they no longer have to choose between paying for their medical needs or affording basics, such as food or shelter.


The Health Ministry says a three-year, $105-million program that took effect Jan. 1 ensures a family with a net annual income of $30,000 or less no longer pay a deductible for prescription drugs.


Before, families with net earnings between $15,000 and $30,000 paid $300 to $600 in deductibles before receiving drug coverage assistance.


Revisions to the program also lower deductibles for households earning between $30,000 and $45,000, while certain payments were wiped out for low-income seniors and for B.C.'s poorest households making less than $14,000.


Previously, even a family earning just over $11,000 annually was required to spend $200 on prescriptions before Pharmacare would begin picking up the tab and Dix calls the change "one of the most significant things" he has achieved since becoming minister when the NDP came to power 18 months ago.


Details released by the Health Ministry say data has shown a link between low-income levels, deductibles and decreased drug spending, indicating that families will forgo filling prescriptions because of the cost.


The changes, the first to Fair Pharmacare since 2003, also demonstrate B.C. is engaged in the federal government's move toward a national pharmacare program, but isn't willing to wait for results, said Dix.


"I think in terms of the future of any national pharmacare program, this shows the kind of steps we need to take to make sure that, at a time when everything is becoming less affordable, that people don't have to make choices ... between their health and other basic services," he told a news conference in Vancouver.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families

Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families
VANCOUVER — The Canadian government says it is processing visas for families who were near the end of the adoption process in Japan after five of them were stranded for weeks in a bureaucratic impasse.

Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families

Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.

Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.
Heather Wall says she thinks Rock Dragon 2.0 disappeared from a park in Nanaimo, B.C., sometime late Friday.

Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.

B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable

B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable
 New limits on fees for cashing cheques and high-cost loans will take effect on Sept. 1 in British Columbia.

B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable

Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert

Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert
A French teenager who accidentally crossed the border from Canada to the United States and reportedly wound up detained for two weeks should serve as a warning to Canadians, says an immigration lawyer.

Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert

Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner

Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner
A coroner has concluded a 16-year-old British Columbia girl died of toxic shock syndrome while on a school trip last year.

Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner

Vancouver Police Arrest A Man For Stealing Woman's Purse In West End Sunday Evening

  Vancouver Police arrested a robbery suspect Sunday evening after he allegedly pushed a woman to the ground and ran off with her purse in Vancouver’s West End.

Vancouver Police Arrest A Man For Stealing Woman's Purse In West End Sunday Evening