Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

Conservatives call on auditor general to investigate $250 million PrescribeIT program

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Apr, 2026 09:21 AM
  • Conservatives call on auditor general to investigate $250 million PrescribeIT program

Conservative MPs are calling on the auditor general to probe the federal government's handling of a $250 million program which is reportedly set to be scrapped next month.

PrescribeIT was launched in 2017 to modernize the way doctors send prescriptions to pharmacies and to phase out older technology, such as fax machines.

Conservative MP Dan Mazier cites reporting by The Globe and Mail which suggests fewer than five per cent of prescriptions are sent using the PrescribeIT program, which is being shut down on May 29.

Mazier says Conservatives have been working at the committee level to produce documents related to PrescribeIT.

He accuses the government of filibustering those efforts until it can restructure the parliamentary committees to reflect the Liberals' new majority in the House of Commons, which is expected to happen this week.

Mazier says if that happens, the public may never see documents explaining the government's handling of PrescribeIT.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada-U.S. trade negotiations not addressed in Anand's G7 meeting with Rubio

Canada-U.S. trade negotiations not addressed in Anand's G7 meeting with Rubio
Top diplomats from the Group of Seven nations gathered in the Niagara region this week to discuss global crises — but Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said she did not broach stalled trade negotiations between Ottawa and the United States.

Canada-U.S. trade negotiations not addressed in Anand's G7 meeting with Rubio

Carney's 1st budget wins support for infrastructure, immigration plans: poll

Carney's 1st budget wins support for infrastructure, immigration plans: poll
Prime Minister Mark Carney secured broad support from across party lines and provincial borders for some major items in his first federal budget, new polling suggests.

Carney's 1st budget wins support for infrastructure, immigration plans: poll

Health Canada won't explain $20M in pharmaceuticals lost from national stockpile

Health Canada won't explain $20M in pharmaceuticals lost from national stockpile
The Public Health Agency of Canada lost more than $20 million worth of pharmaceutical products from the national stockpile this year because of what it calls a "temperature deviation."

Health Canada won't explain $20M in pharmaceuticals lost from national stockpile

Surrey, B.C., home targeted by extortion-related shooting for second time: police

Surrey, B.C., home targeted by extortion-related shooting for second time: police
Police in Surrey, B.C., are investigating after a home was targeted in an extortion-related shooting for the second time.

Surrey, B.C., home targeted by extortion-related shooting for second time: police

Carney to announce latest batch of Major Project Office referrals today

Carney to announce latest batch of Major Project Office referrals today
Prime Minister Mark Carney is in Terrace, B.C., Thursday to announce the next batch of major projects the government is submitting for possible fast-track approval.

Carney to announce latest batch of Major Project Office referrals today

Budget signals lower increases to health transfers, end of funding deals

Budget signals lower increases to health transfers, end of funding deals
The federal budget signals there is no room for the premiers to negotiate for more health-care funding in the coming years, one economist says - and the Ontario government is calling for that to change.

Budget signals lower increases to health transfers, end of funding deals