This article analyzes the benefits and costs of replacing Canada's ten different provincial formularies with one single national formulary. The 2002 Romanow Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada recommended that Canada should have a National Drug Agency which would maintain a national formulary, replacing the existing provincial formularies which balkanize drug markets across Canada. This recommendation has been in part incorporated into the Common Drug Review in which the provinces (excluding Quebec) have agreed to undertake a single evaluation of all new drugs; provinces, however, retain their own formularies and decide which products to list. This balkanized approach to listing and insurance coverage of drugs substantially we...
Objectives: Unlike other high-income countries, Canada has no national policy for drugs treating rar...
Abstract On a per capita basis, Canadian drug costs are already the second highest in ...
It is the Canadian public policy issue that rears its head with regularity, never achieving much mor...
PHARMACEUTICAL POLICY IN CANADA IS SET AT both the federal and provincial levels of government. The ...
BACKGROUND: The financial accessibility of antimicrobial drugs to the outpatient community in Canada...
The financial accessibility of antimicrobial drugs to the outpatient community in Canada is governed...
The adoption of the Lions Gate Hospital Drug Formulary by the British Columbia Hospital Association ...
ceutique au Canada. Ces recommandations suggèrent de se diriger vers un programme d’assurance-médica...
Background: Hospitals in Canada manage their formularies independently, yet many inpatients are disc...
Background: Canadians have long been proud of their universal health insurance syst...
Canada adopted guidelines for the economic evaluation of pharmaceuticals in 1994, and a central proc...
Canadians pay amongst the highest generic drug prices in the world. In July 2010, the province of On...
Hospitals in Canada manage their formularies independently, yet many inpatients are discharged on me...
Canadians pay amongst the highest generic drug prices in the world. In July 2010, the province of On...
Canada needs a national strategy to fulfill its obligation to ensure universal access to necessary h...
Objectives: Unlike other high-income countries, Canada has no national policy for drugs treating rar...
Abstract On a per capita basis, Canadian drug costs are already the second highest in ...
It is the Canadian public policy issue that rears its head with regularity, never achieving much mor...
PHARMACEUTICAL POLICY IN CANADA IS SET AT both the federal and provincial levels of government. The ...
BACKGROUND: The financial accessibility of antimicrobial drugs to the outpatient community in Canada...
The financial accessibility of antimicrobial drugs to the outpatient community in Canada is governed...
The adoption of the Lions Gate Hospital Drug Formulary by the British Columbia Hospital Association ...
ceutique au Canada. Ces recommandations suggèrent de se diriger vers un programme d’assurance-médica...
Background: Hospitals in Canada manage their formularies independently, yet many inpatients are disc...
Background: Canadians have long been proud of their universal health insurance syst...
Canada adopted guidelines for the economic evaluation of pharmaceuticals in 1994, and a central proc...
Canadians pay amongst the highest generic drug prices in the world. In July 2010, the province of On...
Hospitals in Canada manage their formularies independently, yet many inpatients are discharged on me...
Canadians pay amongst the highest generic drug prices in the world. In July 2010, the province of On...
Canada needs a national strategy to fulfill its obligation to ensure universal access to necessary h...
Objectives: Unlike other high-income countries, Canada has no national policy for drugs treating rar...
Abstract On a per capita basis, Canadian drug costs are already the second highest in ...
It is the Canadian public policy issue that rears its head with regularity, never achieving much mor...