Supplementary
Opinion of the New Democratic Party of Canada
Libby Davies,
Vancouver East; Dany Morin, Chicoutimi-Le Fjord; and Isabelle Morin; Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Lachine.
The Federal Role in
Addressing Prescription Drug Abuse in Canada
The New Democrat Members of the Standing
Committee on Health generally support the recommendations in the final report
on The Federal Role in Addressing Prescription Drug Abuse in Canada. However,
we believe the recommendations do not reflect the depth of ideas shared by
witnesses who testified before the Committee—particularly witnesses who
recommended that harm reduction approaches and safety measures that may aid
Canadians dealing with prescription drug abuse and save lives. Witnesses also
stressed the need to focus on the social determinants of health for First
Nations communities and that programs dealing with prescription drug abuse in
these communities must be implemented in accordance with the values, attitudes,
and aspirations of the First Nations peoples.
NDP
Recommendations:
Better
Oversight
- Health Canada
consider amending its regulatory framework in order to require that all
prescription drugs with addiction potential have tamper resistant formulations
in order to receive approval under the Food and Drugs Act and that it monitor
the ongoing effectiveness of tamper-resistant formulations.
- Health Canada
immediately undertake a review of all product monographs, labels, and
advertising materials for prescription drugs; including opioids, stimulants,
tranquilizers and sedatives, to determine whether they accurately reflect
current data regarding their risks and abuse potential.
- Health Canada
encourage regulatory bodies to adopt the Canadian Guideline for Safe and
Effective Use of Opioids for Chronic Non-Cancer Pain as a standard of care,
for which there may be special exceptions, against which they evaluate the
prescribing practices of health care practitioners.
Effective
Use of the National Anti-Drug Strategy
- The federal
government provide funds through the National Anti-Drug Strategy to the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse to support the implementation of the pan-Canadian strategy entitled First Do No Harm: Responding to Canada’s Prescription Drug Crisis.
- The federal
government allocate funding in the National Anti-Drug Strategy to support the
development of national evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for the
prescribing of other drugs with addiction potential, including benzodiazepines
and stimulants such as Ritalin.
Need
for a pan-Canadian monitoring system
- Health Canada and the
Canadian Institute for Health Information work with stakeholders to develop
national standards for data collection for prescription drug monitoring systems
across the country.
- The federal
government work with stakeholders to develop a pan-Canadian, inter-operable
prescription drug surveillance and monitoring system to monitor and prevent the
misuse, abuse, diversion, and harms of prescription drugs.
- That Health Canada
work with stakeholders to develop a national monitoring system to track the
extent and typology of overdoses in Canada.
Social
Determinants of Health and Community Interventions
- Health Canada
recognize the importance of the social determinants of health and harm
reduction as key elements of community-based prevention and treatment services.
- Health Canada remove
barriers to accessing Suboxone through the Non-Insured Health Benefits program,
including the requirement that it be prescribed by a health care practitioners
licensed to prescribe methadone.
- Health Canada direct
funding in the National Anti-Drug Strategy to support the provision of
community-based prevention and treatment services that are culturally based and
that include access to Suboxone, an opioid replacement therapy.
- That the request of
the Assembly of First Nations for a Joint Review of the Non-Insured Health
Benefits program be forwarded to the Minister of Health for immediate action.
We believe that prescription drug abuse is a
crisis within our health care system that must be addressed. The New Democratic
Party, in accordance with the testimony heard from witnesses at the Standing
Committee on Health, urges the federal government to take leadership on this
issue, to ensure Health Canada fulfills its responsibilities as Canada’s drug
regulator and fifth largest health provider; and to work with the provinces and
territories to prevent, treat, and reduce the harms associated with prescription
drug abuse.