Trudeau touts ‘real progress’ on pharmacare, calls on premiers to start cutting deals
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday provinces and territories need to start negotiating pharmacare deals as soon as possible, a day after legislation to enact the program received royal assent.
“This is real progress, but now we need the provinces and territories to come to the table and sign agreements with us that supports Canadians and takes pressure off their household budgets as soon as possible,” Trudeau told reporters as he wrapped a trip to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Summit in Laos.
He said the program will help people who are struggling to pay for prescriptions, and said his government “not only (believes) in a woman’s right to choose, we act on it.”
The pharmacare bill passed the Senate without amendments Thursday, and received royal assent shortly after. In the long term it will inform the creation of any future universal pharmacare plan but in the immediate term the bill paves the way for the federal government to sign deals with provinces and territories to cover diabetes and birth-control medications as part of the public health system.