Pursuant to the order of reference of May 29, 2024, the committee will resume its study of Bill , an act to amend the Food and Drugs Act with regard to natural health products.
Welcome to our panel of witnesses. Joining us today for the first hour we have the Honourable Mark Holland, Minister of Health. We also welcome the officials accompanying him today from the Department of Health: Dr. Supriya Sharma, chief medical adviser; and Linsey Hollett, assistant deputy minister, regulatory, operations and enforcement branch. Thank you all for being with us here today.
Minister Holland, this is familiar territory for you. You have five minutes for your opening statement, and you now have the floor.
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Thank you, Mr. Chair, for the opportunity to be back at this committee and to talk about this bill.
Let me say, on the first order, that natural health products are an extremely important part of the choices Canadians have as they make choices about their health and the products they wish to consume, but, as with all other products, it is essential that we make sure they're safe. We can recall a tube of lipstick or a head of lettuce, but this bill would gut our ability to recall natural health products.
Folks, this is a cuckoo bananas bill, with all due respect. Let me just give you an example. The U.S. FDA detected the presence of filth, including animal feces, coloured fibres, white paint chips, white material, plastic-adhering products—
Todd, like me, you have a good outdoor voice. I'll push the microphone away. I appreciate the note.
Can I rewind the tape a little bit? Let me go back, if I could. I'm going to hit the timer here.
The U.S. FDA indicated to Health Canada the presence of filth, including animal feces, coloured fibres, paint chips and a plastic-adhering product in a gummy dietary supplement produced in Canada. Health Canada did a report, an investigation, and found rodent droppings and urine.
Let's be really clear about what this bill would do. This bill would mean that if a product contains rodent droppings and urine, we have no ability to pull it from the shelves. Folks, if you want feces-contaminated natural health products sitting on shelves, with Health Canada having no ability to pull them, then this bill is for you. If you don't want your natural health products contaminated with things like fibreglass, paint chips, feces or urine, then I would suggest that giving Health Canada the ability to pull those products is essential.
I've heard the committee say things like, “Well, you could do a stop-sale.” Absolutely, but a stop-sale doesn't allow us to pull them from the shelves. The idea that we can pull lipstick off the shelf but not a natural health product is a bananas notion.
The other thing that has been brought up is fines: “Oh, my goodness, there are going to be $5-million fines.” It's not Health Canada that imposes these fines. It is the courts. Right now, the maximum fine is $5,000 dollars. Do you want to say to a plant like the one I've just described here, with rodent droppings, urine and paint chips, that their maximum fine from the court is $5,000? The strangest part is that this is coming from a party that purports to be all about law and order. This is about giving the courts, not Health Canada, the tools they need to impose proper fines.
I just want to go over some of the things that are found, like mould and lead. In the example of lead, we have somebody who was hospitalized with lead poisoning. Can you imagine leaving that on the shelves and not having the ability to pull it off? People talk about vitamins. Let's talk about how in February 2021 a product with high levels of undisclosed vitamin D resulted in a teenager being hospitalized for 10 days and how, after we find that, this bill would take away our ability to take that off the shelf. Folks, that makes no sense.
The other thing this bill does is deal with precision regulatory powers, so that we can be nimble. I know this committee has been talking about nicotine replacement therapy, and I'm glad the committee agrees that we should have the ability to protect our youth in that way, but what about pseudoephedrine? It's a precursor to making meth. We need to have the ability to protect human health.
Let's talk about what this bill does and doesn't do. This bill isn't about labelling. This bill isn't about cost recovery. It has nothing to do with that. I'm happy to come back to this committee and have conversations on that topic. Those are good and important conversations that I want to have, but this bill has nothing to do with that.
What this bill has to do with is killing Vanessa's Law. Vanessa's Law only comes into effect when there is a serious human health concern that is present.
I have been disappointed that there has been reference to a Deloitte study that was commissioned by industry and only looked at vitamins and minerals, and only in hospitals, but the Auditor General's report was ignored. The Auditor General is talking about how serious this is. The Auditor General's report is ignored, but an industry study in a very limited way, done by Deloitte and paid for by industry, is suddenly what we're listening to.
In terms of consultations, since 2016, there have been 4,500 consumer and health care consultations. In 2019 alone, 70 different companies met. I'll end on this point, Mr. Chair. I met with companies like Jamieson, fantastic Canadian companies that are doing incredible things, that are hiring Canadians and where “made in Canada” means something. The cost to people who comply or try to comply is zero dollars.
When it says “made in Canada” and you sell that around the world, it means something. It means that product is safe. It means it doesn't have feces in it. It means it doesn't have lead in it. It means it doesn't have undisclosed amounts of something in it that could make you sick.
If we can recall a tube of toothpaste, a lipstick or a lettuce, why in God's name would we not be able to recall a natural health product?
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Mr. Chair, it is commonplace within this committee, as well as other committees that I've sat on, that the length of a question is applied to the length of the answer. Where the frustration comes, with this minister, is that he tends to go on beyond the length of the time that it took to ask the question.
As you know, members are given a specific allotment of time. It is frustrating when you have ministers appear, not just this minister, but other ministers.... I know that this minister is well versed in the art of what we call ragging the puck, and so are other ministers, taking up the time of each member. When my colleague and others ask simple questions about a number, that's all they look to receive. If we wanted the statistics for each province, I would offer that it would then bode the answer that the minister was going for.
I can see that my colleague has done research and has a number of questions that he would like to ask, so I would ask, through you to the minister, that if and when he can be concise, to please be concise.
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Thank you very much, Chair.
Minister, after all of the bombast, we'll go back to the questioning here.
When we begin to look at Canadians, we see that, because of your mismanagement of the health file, they have to look after themselves by virtue of turning to things such as natural health products. Your ineptitude has led many Canadians we've heard from to use natural health products.
That being said, how many Canadian seniors are hospitalized every year because of pharmaceutical products?
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I'll interrupt you there.
The difficulty is, Minister, that 13,000 Canadians are harmed by pharmaceutical products every year. There were 13,000 seniors hospitalized. People need a reference.
All you want to do is talk down to Canadians about feces and lead, with all of your fantastical words. That's what you're attempting to do.
Minister, I have a very simple question. How much does the NHP industry contribute to the GDP of Canada on a yearly basis?
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This is an absolute threat to the health of Canadians. This bill is a terrible, awful bill. Look, I get it. If I were a Conservative, I wouldn't want to ask questions or to talk about it either.
Here's the problem. I've gone through the example of the rat feces and the urine, but let me go through some others. Let's talk about a young woman, in 2021, who was taking natural health products that had unacceptable levels of lead. They should have no lead. It led to her being poisoned. This really endangered this person's health. I talked about this vitamin D case, also in 2021, with undisclosed levels of vitamin D. A teenager was hospitalized for 10 days. I just pick these out as some of the 772 serious adverse effects from 2021 to 2023; that's a two-year period.
No one is disputing the importance of natural health products. They're incredibly important, and they should be available to Canadians.
What does it mean when it says “made in Canada”? It means you can trust it. It means that you're not going to leave something on the shelf that's contaminated by rat feces or contaminated by fibreglass or contaminated by lead. The idea that we would take away our ability to recall that would be frightening to most Canadians.
One of my objectives is to pull this out of the subreddits, where this has been lingering, where there's a lot of false information, and to pull it out into the light of day. I am certain that most Canadians would be horrified at what this bill would do.
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Let me give you a specific example of where it could have been used. In 2019, Health Canada received a consumer complaint about an adverse reaction leading to hospitalization after taking an unlicensed kratom product. Health Canada requested that the firm stop the sale of the product. That's the power we had at the time: to say that it had to stop selling this product.
The problem is that we have no power to pull it from the shelves, so it just sits there on the shelf, dangerously contaminated. That leaves us to beg and plead for the individual to take it off the shelf, to chase down the places where it might be and to ask them, pretty please, to take it off the shelves. Nowhere else exists where we would allow that kind of thing to happen.
What Vanessa's Law does, then, is make sure of two very important things. First, with regard to that plant I was talking about that was contaminated with animal feces and urine, we can recall those products, so that nobody is using those products that are contaminated, and we can also empower the courts—not us—to be able to determine, in a judicial process, what is an appropriate fine for the negligence and to ensure that there is a penalty associated with that negligence.
Now, the last point—and this is an extremely important point—is that if you are compliant or trying to be compliant, this never gets triggered. For a company that's a good actor, the cost of Vanessa's Law is exactly zero dollars. In fact, I would argue that undermining the made-in-Canada brand by creating a circumstance where there is uncertainty about whether or not products on the shelves are safe makes Canadian products worth less and puts Canadian companies at risk in terms of their global brand recognition.
When you talk to a company.... I'm sorry to pick on Jamieson; I was there recently. Jamieson is an amazing company. When they sell around the world, they will tell you that the Canadian, made-in-Canada and Health Canada-regulated brand is worth so much to them as they export around the world. We have to protect that.
I'm a bit surprised by the minister's tone and openness on this issue, since we're discussing Bill because the government included these obligations in its mammoth Bill . I sincerely believe that he covered it up during his discussions with the industry to try to make it possible to distinguish natural health products from products offered under the pharmaceutical model. I'm not going to pursue this because I only have six minutes, but that's the basic argument.
Forgive me, Mr. Minister, but your attitude and comments have been quite contemptuous towards committee members. If I were a member of the pharmaceutical industry, I wouldn't be too happy. You're using fairly specific arguments so that the industry looks poorly organized.
According to Health Canada, 350 natural health products have been recalled in five years. Again, according to Health Canada, 31 public health advisories have been issued as a result of these recalls. When we issue such opinions, it's because we consider the problem to be really dangerous.
What was the reaction and collaboration of the businesses concerned following those 31 public health advisories?
First, yes, I am angry because Bill threatens the health of everyone in this country. This is a ridiculous bill to be debating. There's a lot of misinformation. The reason I'm here today is to make it clear that this bill is a threat to our health care system.
Second, there is a difference between the bill we are currently studying and the need to protect the possibility of removing products containing contaminants. Yes, the bill raises other concerns, such as the possibility of improving the way natural products are managed. However, that's another matter, which isn't the one under consideration today.
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In the first order, I think I've talked clearly about the things that really worry me about this bill. I spoke very forcefully about that because I need it to be heard. This is a real danger.
In the second order, on conversations around the management of things like nicotine replacement therapies, which don't have tobacco, using an act that's really for tobacco and vaping.... I'm willing to have that conversation. I understand your objective, but I would ask, what about the precision regulatory ability to go after pseudoephedrine, which is a precursor to methamphetamine? We need to have the ability writ large to act in an agile way to an ever-evolving environment. Unfortunately, in the manufacturing of illicit drugs, for example, a lot of things that can seem very innocuous can suddenly be used in very dangerous ways. Maintaining that precision regulatory power is something that is very important to protect the country, but I would say to your other point.... Every conversation you and I have had, Luc, has been centred in very reasonable positions.
I apologize for speaking in English, but things like “pseudoephedrine” and “precursors to methamphetamine” are not words I'd say well in French.
We all understand that the natural health products industry is an important industry and that so many Canadians—millions of Canadians—depend on natural health products. I count myself among them, so I have some questions about the bill.
However, before I come to that, I couldn't resist, given Dr. Ellis's line of questioning, asking you to dispel a couple of myths that have been passed around the health committee table. The first is that the dental care program the NDP pushed for and successfully worked on doesn't exist. The second is that pharmacare has no future.
My questions for you are simply these. First of all, how many Canadians have benefited from the Canadian dental care program to date, in the first 24 weeks of the program? Second, how many provinces have indicated an interest in signing up to the pharmacare program, which will cover diabetes medication and devices—
Respectfully, Mr. Chair, what's the relevance to this? Next, you're going to have the minister talking about Canadians gargling with gasoline, which we know is a complete falsehood. At least Dr. Ellis had relevance in his line of questioning, comparing pharmaceuticals to natural health products.
Far be it from the NDP to want to cover all the bases and keep whatever semblance of a coalition they have with their friends there, but, Mr. Chair, I ask you.... I won't be as blunt as my colleague. Please, there has to be some relevance to the topic we're talking about here. If our friend from the NDP wants to wax on and on and use his time to ask these types of questions, there has to be some relevance.
Mr. Naqvi spoke eloquently about relevance, so we're doing the same.
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I think the facts are so clear in this case. I agree. It doesn't make a lot of sense to talk about this bill. It's an awful, terrible bill. I'm happy now, at this point, to take other types of questions.
It's true. The Conservatives said that the dental care program didn't exist, and we're about to hit a million people who've received care on the precipice of it. The last time I checked, a million people is a long way off from not existing.
In terms of pharmacare, just as we've been getting it done on dental care, we're going to do it on pharmacare. We have a lot of very interested provinces. We'll be signing deals.
I'll tell you why this is big. Take something like diabetes. Diabetes costs us $30 billion every single year, and it's going up every single year. People getting their medication matters. We have to be upstream. We have to be preventing, and—I'll bring it back to this bill—that includes preventing adverse outcomes that are entirely preventable. Vanessa's Law allows us to prevent people from getting sick by making sure that products that aren't safe are pulled from shelves.
Why on earth would we want people winding up in hospital from something that was entirely avoidable?
You didn't actually answer my second question, but hopefully you can do that a little later on.
Coming back to the bill now, , who's the originator of the bill, came forward at this committee and said the following in terms of the powers that Health Canada already has:
They [have] the ability to stop a sale.... They have border power for personal-use imports, where they have the ability to seize any product that they want. They can revoke a site licence for any of the sites.... They can mandate a label change any time they want and add any warnings they want to products. They can inspect any site licence. They can inspect any product. They approved every natural product number that's out there, and they can revoke a natural product number and cancel the product.
That was his testimony. How do you respond to that? Are those all powers that Health Canada has now? If so, why aren't those powers being used?
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Maybe there's an acceptable level of rodent feces and urine that Mr. Ellis has for a natural health product facility. I don't have that. If rat poop and urine are in a facility, then you can debate how much it was. Maybe if there's only a certain amount of rat poop and urine, that's enough for you. It's not enough for me.
There's an instance that, when the U.S. FDA tells us this, yes, we can stop importing any more, but anything that's on the other side of the border and that's on store shelves, we can't do anything about it. Vanessa's Law allows us to take those products off the shelves. That's what's so critical. We lack the ability today.
Here's the second most important point. Let's talk about that facility. The maximum fine the courts can issue right now is only $5,000. I would say that's a cost of doing business. Why have a clean or healthy site producing products if the worst thing a court can do to you is to give you a $5,000 fine? The courts need the ability to scale those fines to make sure that bad actors are appropriately punished.
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Okay. So, you expect the studies that you have commissioned with Deloitte to add value to Canadians. However, if anyone else commissions a study—maybe with Deloitte, maybe with someone else—you completely undermine it. You came in here this morning and started your remarks by saying, “with all due respect”. Then you completely dumped all over an industry for which, according to this Deloitte study—which I have no reason to doubt—“new labelling restrictions are likely to add substantial costs.” The study continues: “The results show that the new legislation will have dire consequences for the sector and the broader economy. The sector is mainly dominated by small businesses of less than 50 employees.” The sector “has grown from...$4.3 billion in [total] sales in 2007 to approximately $13.2 billion in [total] sales in 2021”.
So, as is so often the case, you and your government are going to be bringing the hammer down, as only a Liberal government can, on hard-working entrepreneurs and small businesses, all the while turning a blind eye to criminals, for example. This Deloitte study, which I referenced and have no reason to doubt, shows that 20% of the businesses I just mentioned would move their operations outside of Canada with regard to your government's heavy-handed approach. Why would you want businesses to move to the U.S., where Canadians would continue to purchase their products online, but Health Canada would then not have any ability to have oversight?
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In the first order, I didn't dump on the industry; I dumped on the bill. Those are two very different things. The industry's fantastic. The point that I made is that the bill is awful.
The second point is that my criticism of the Deloitte study is that it only dealt with vitamins and minerals and that it only dealt with hospital settings. It was very, very narrow in scope, and yes, it was commissioned by the industry.
The third point is that most of the issues that you're talking about that affect industry deal with labelling and with cost recovery, which this bill has absolutely nothing to do with. The exact cost.... I'll go back, to be very clear, because you talk about turning a blind eye to criminals. A blind eye to criminals would be giving a $5,000 fine to an incredibly negligent firm. If you are compliant, sir, you have absolutely nothing to fear from this bill. In fact, if you're working to be compliant, you have nothing to fear from this bill. It is only in cases of egregious negligence that these measures kick in. It is not us who adjudicate the penalty, but the courts. I would suggest to you that negligence resulting in potentially a death or somebody being hospitalized is a gross form of negligence that needs to be dealt with in the courts. It would, in fact, be blind—to use your nomenclature—to leave the system in place that would allow that kind of gross negligence to occur.
Lastly, in terms of the Canadian brand, why would you go and buy something from any country other than one that has the best regulatory regime to make sure that it's safe? Whether it's smoke-free Ontario or seat belts, I've heard these arguments again and again: that if you do something that creates safety, you're going to kill business; 10 out of 10 times, that is not the case. There's improved business, improved safety and improved outcomes.
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Minister, I took note of one very loose thread you mentioned here about a precursor to meth. How do you reconcile that?
I would think everyone acknowledges that you have been defending the indefensible as of late, including defending this . Four out of five Canadians want him to step down, but you continue to defend him. Now you're defending your government's heavy-handed approach that targets small business while turning a blind eye, as I mentioned, to real criminals.
You will recall your government's Bill . You introduced the subject of meth into this discussion, so I am going to ask you a question on this. How do you reconcile your government's legislation? For importing and exporting schedule I drugs and for producing schedule I drugs in Canada—that means running a meth lab, for example—it says that an individual convicted of running a meth lab or importing meth or a precursor product for meth, cocaine or heroin can now serve their sentence from the comfort of their home.
I think Canadians now know with hindsight that your government got it wrong when it comes to illegal drugs, but how do you reconcile coming down—
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I wouldn't want to ask questions about this horrible bill either.
In the first order, the only people we're coming down hard on are the people who are negligent and wildly out of compliance. That's the only thing that Vanessa's Law does. If there's anybody in New Brunswick who is being come down hard on, it's because they're wickedly negligent. That's what we're dealing with here.
With respect to the policies you talked about on crime, Newt Gingrich proposed the same approach on crime that you're talking about. He called it the greatest disaster of his career. Every place where it's been tried, it's been an abject and total failure.
I will stick to science. I will stick to data. I will stick to evidence. I will not follow approaches that sound good for a slogan but have no basis in evidentiary truth.
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It's a great question. Of course, it isn't fair, and it is dangerous.
Moreover, I've had the opportunity to meet with all kinds of companies, and what they tell me is that they want a fair and level playing field. I think it's deeply unfair to create a circumstance whereby good actors that respond quickly to stop-sale orders and voluntarily comply are left to compete with companies that don't. That's what would happen here. If you're a bad actor, all you'd face is a $5,000 fine. That's a cost of doing business. Basically, you can operate however out of control you want, and we're put in the terrible position of trying to comply and create fairness.
I can tell you that the companies I talk to don't want that. We have a lot of fantastic Canadian companies employing people and growing their business to multiple billions of dollars. What they're asking for is to make sure that Health Canada has the powers to keep a level playing field so that the good actors—the ones trying to keep people safe, be a good business and have good business practices—aren't put in a disadvantaged position because there are weak regulations to deal with bad actors. That's what this is about. To me, that's fundamentally fair.
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I don't know. In fairness, there's been an enormous amount of misinformation, and that misinformation has created a lot of fear in businesses.
When I actually talk to small businesses that are in this space, I explain Vanessa's Law: If they're compliant, or even trying to be compliant, they have nothing to fear. This is good for their business, and they're fully supportive of it.
This is one of the reasons I'm talking so plainly today. We have to cut through the misinformation. It's really doing an enormous amount of damage. By the way, the false and misleading claims are.... We have to have a conversation at this committee regarding all the claims about products that cure cancer. Just to pick on that as an example, there are people who take products thinking they will cure their cancer, and they avoid traditional treatments. I don't mind you using something in conjunction with your traditional treatment, but you should be talking to your physician about that. When companies are making boldfaced false claims, that can change consumer behaviour in a way that's injurious to their health.
That's what I'm concerned about here. This false argument that somehow it hurts the economy to have strong regulation is malarkey. We know the natural health products.... I hear from consumers all the time. They like to buy their products from Canada, because they know they're well regulated. They know that what's in the bottle is going to be safe, and that they can trust what's in there. What a marketing opportunity. What an advantage over other countries. Why would we want to lose that? Why would we ever do anything to undercut that? We would be taking away one of the greatest competitive advantages that we have, which allows so many different Canadian companies in this space to be booming.
I am their biggest ally. I want them to succeed. I want them to be selling more all around the world. It is my deep and heartfelt belief that having strong regulations and protecting those products is exactly how we get it done.
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Mr. Minister, let's not exaggerate. We're not talking about repealing Vanessa's Law. It will continue to apply to pharmaceuticals and other products.
With respect to methamphetamines and precursors, I recommend that you reread section 7.1 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, which gives you ample power to intervene.
What I'm going to say now isn't directly related to the bill, but I'll take advantage of it since you're before me, and it will facilitate your interactions with the industry. At a previous meeting, I asked you a question about the expert panel that wrote the final report on the legislative review of the Cannabis Act. That committee recommended revising packaging and labelling rules to allow for QR codes for cannabis. You told me that you were going to do so and that there would be a QR code for cannabis products.
If it's good for cannabis products, is it also good for natural health products?
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Okay. Thank you. That's helpful for us.
I'll come back to two other questions that weren't answered.
As testified, every natural health product number is approved by Health Canada, and Health Canada has the ability to “revoke a natural product number and cancel the product.” I want to come back and ask you about that, Minister.
With a few seconds left, as well, could you answer my question about the number of provinces that have stepped up on pharmacare or are interested in the program?
Also, thank you for the information that a million Canadians have benefited from dental care. I think that's something that, hopefully, Conservative MPs will send out to their ridings, as well.
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If they had the right information—that this doesn't affect compliant businesses—then they wouldn't be concerned, and hopefully you would help spread that.
There was an attempt in 2014 to do this, which was shot down by the then Conservative government. That's too bad.
In 2016, we began negotiations as a government. You can't have it both ways. You can't attack us for not having enough consultations, and then attack us because the consultations were too long. I mean, you have to pick one. Since 2016, we've been having consultations and, because of all the misinformation being thrown around, yes, unfortunately, it's taken this long. You are attacking me for not having enough consultations, and now I'm being attacked for having too many.
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I hope that people in the industry watch this and know that I'm cheering for them. I want them to succeed. It's just like when we had the Smoke-Free Ontario Act come in, and people told me that this was the end of restaurants. It was going to destroy everything, and everybody was going to move elsewhere. It didn't happen, folks. You can go back and watch the videos on seat belts, which were going to destroy industry and make everything terrible.
This is what happens. Conservatives use these arguments, this fearmongering, that the end is going to happen and that, if you keep people safe, you're making this terrible choice that's going to destroy industry.
I would say to anybody in the industry that having the power when there is a serious human health issue, and only then, to recall products and have fines determined by a court, to make sure that the court can appropriately disincentivize that bad behaviour and punish those who do it, is just good common sense, and it makes the Canadian brand strong.
If you're a compliant business or you're a business that's even trying to be compliant, this will cost you exactly zero dollars. If you're a consumer, you're going to be able to see that “made in Canada” and know that the product you're taking is safe. That's worth a lot. When we sell that product around the world and they see “made in Canada” and see that it's safe, that's worth a lot. We need to protect that.
One of the reasons I'm being so forceful here today is that there's been so much misinformation that we have to spike through that misinformation so that people hear the truth. If you are a compliant business or a business trying to be compliant, you have no cost and nothing to fear here, just like if you're not committing crimes, you don't have to worry about the punishment for a crime.
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Thank you very much, Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses for being here.
Obviously, you were all part of this. I find it fascinating to hear the minister say he's such a fan of the industry but characterize factories as “full of feces”. I know he found that quite humorous, but I would suggest to all of you, sitting there in a $13.2-billion industry.... We'll have a chance to hear from industry folks on Thursday, thankfully.
For Canadians, could you tell us how many factories full of feces were actually found? That's a direct quote from the minister. How many factories full of feces were found? Just a number is great.
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Thank you very much, Ms. Hollett.
Again, I'm asking very specific questions here, sadly, on behalf of an industry that, again, contributes $13.2 billion to Canada's GDP and creates 92,000 jobs. Approximately 70% to 90% are female entrepreneurs in small and medium-sized businesses.
We just had a minister here, in his bombast and utter foolishness, suggesting there were factories full of rat feces and urine, and you're saying you can't even tell me how many of these factories...or if it's even actually true.
With all due respect, of course, that's the expectation that folks would have. You would expect.... I suspect, in your own home, that you don't want any rat feces or urine. That sometimes may happen. That doesn't mean that you're a bad person or that you're unclean, etc.
I agree with the fact that the recall power would be very important. Once again, with all due respect, I have asked this now the third or perhaps the fourth time, and the minister quoted these things very specifically. What you're telling me is, “Well, I think it existed, but I can't tell you how many times or how many places of manufacture were actually affected by it.” You can't give us a number. Is that true?
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I guess, once again, we're back to this issue of production of documents, aren't we?
It is my understanding, of course, that we're actually here to shed some light on things. We're not here, much as Dr. Sharma did last time, to make some wild allegations. Again, what we were told, when we asked for those documents to be tabled, was to go find them ourselves. That is when the industry, of course, used the esteemed company Deloitte to create a report to suggest how many injuries actually happened or, as Dr. Sharma would have suggested, the hundreds of deaths.
That being said, once again, you're stonewalling a committee that is asking you for documents. You have never actually said, “Yes, I will provide those.” Just tell me. Provide those reports, please. Give a simple answer, yes or no. Table them here to this committee.
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did testify before this committee. He wasn't wrong to say that there are other provisions and tools that Health Canada can take.
I think it would be very helpful for this committee to understand each of those three cases, which seem to be the egregious ones. No one disagrees that the vast majority of companies in Canada work in a very responsible way. They believe in the natural health product industry. They want to make sure that they're offering the best-quality product. In the vast majority of cases, they comply voluntarily.
I think it's important for the committee to understand and for us to know, in those rare cases—one in a hundred, from the statistics that we seem to have before us—what other tools Health Canada has employed against the companies that simply refuse to be compliant and essentially stain the reputation of all the other companies, which are complying.
I want to come back to public notices, because you spoke earlier about the impact of delays. In those 31 cases, it appears that there were delays in the companies that were voluntarily complying. Can you give us a sense of the average length of time when a company didn't comply with an initial voluntary recall but then did comply once Health Canada provided a public warning?
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I fully understand that you're not going to be able to gather all this data, because there are imperfect circumstances. Is there anywhere in the behemoth that is Health Canada any data on how many negative health outcomes there were from the 350 that were flagged as problematic, the 31 that had public advisories issued, and the three that were uncooperative?
This is germane to the conversation we're having. The fact that you don't have these statistics readily available for us says, to me, that there was a failure in preparing to come to this committee today.
Can you send this information to us as soon as possible, regarding the information that Health Canada knows? I understand that it's not going to be complete and that not every negative interaction will be reported to Health Canada, but we need to know what Health Canada knows, because right now we're basically being told, “Just trust us.”
:
Certainly, the Auditor General did take a comprehensive look at the system with respect to natural health products and raised a number of issues. We've accepted all of those and have endeavoured to make improvements.
Vanessa's Law goes part of the way to improving the system. I think the ability to mandate a recall in exceptional circumstances for serious and imminent threats and the ability to compel a change to a label, again, if it's serious, are very important. Having fines and penalties without having regulatory requirements, without having that regulatory backstop of appropriate fines and penalties, which before Vanessa's Law were only $5,000, makes the system rather toothless. There are also other provisions that we haven't yet put into force with respect to reporting adverse drug reactions, terms and conditions, and other tools.
With those tools, it does go a certain way to improving the system. I think there are still other modifications and improvements that can be made. We've talked to the committee about some of those other initiatives. That's separate from what we're talking about today.
Certainly, Vanessa's Law does move the bar in terms of bringing the regulation of natural health products up to a minimum standard that we would expect for all therapeutic products in Canada.
:
In essence, this is not even a theoretical question, because we lived it prior to adding Vanessa's Law authorities to NHPs. There are many consequences, but maybe I can highlight three that are top of mind for me.
Number one—and there's been a lot of discussion about this today—when we have the most serious of situations and we do not have a co-operative entity, a co-operative company—again, I will stress that this is the minority of cases—we will not have a way to remove products from retail shelves. I firmly believe that Canadians think their health regulator has that ability, but we would not.
Two, if someone were to disobey a mandatory recall or in some other way be in strong non-compliance with the regulations and the act, and we wanted, after we had mitigated the risk, to move to punitive measures, our stick would be very small—you heard, $5,000 in fines. In Vanessa's Law, we also have injunction authority, which hasn't gotten much attention today. If someone was willfully non-compliant, we would be very hard-pressed to follow that up with the tools we have in a meaningful way.
:
It depends on which study you look at, but, definitely, more than 60% of the natural health product companies are small or medium-sized. Overall, with respect to Vanessa's Law, there would be minimal impact because, again, these are only circumstances where you have a serious safety risk and you have a company that's not complying with that safety risk.
The example that was used in the Auditor General's report was actually a tea extract. It was contaminated with something called mycophenolate, which is a pharmaceutical product that's used for immunosuppression in people who have had organ transplants. It was first noted in 2017. By 2018, the company still hadn't recalled it. By 2020, it was back on the market online, selling these products. Exposure to mycophenolate for women who are pregnant can cause miscarriages and birth defects. That was the example in the Auditor General's report.
I think a company that is small or medium-sized in this environment would want companies that are not compliant and not abiding by the rules to have some corrective action and to have circumstances whereby we can create a level playing field.
Again, if you're making a quality product, you're abiding by the regulations. This would not have an impact. Actually, there are provisions in Vanessa's Law that get into the technicalities for the corporations I referenced, which would actually be advantageous for businesses to help them in terms of standards and—
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I just wanted to reiterate what I've asked for and what you've committed to bring back.
First, I've asked for the results of those three companies that were non-compliant, whether those companies are still in business or whether they've had their licences suspended. What actions and tools were used by Health Canada over that period with these three companies that were non-compliant? What's the number of adverse impacts connected to natural health products among the 31 warnings that were issued? It would all be very helpful, I think, for members of the committee to consider.
Now, Ms. Hollett, you were speaking earlier about the three categories. You spoke to category I, which was immediate, with a 24- to 48-hour reaction time. I would like you to speak to categories II and III as well. I'm assuming that the 31 public warnings were all category I, but I just wanted to clarify that and get your confirmation.
:
To start with the last part of your question, usually—and by that I mean the vast majority of the time—if we are publicly communicating on a risk issue, we are talking about type I. However, we do communicate on type II on occasion. I will just give a quick example: If the risk is specific to or heightened for a vulnerable subpopulation, then we communicate on type II as well. We very rarely, if at all, communicate on type III.
There are two things that we're talking about in tandem. When I talk about type I, II and III, I'm speaking of risk. With colleagues, scientific experts at Health Canada, we determine the level of risk. Then that correlates to what I was speaking about earlier, which are service standards or the time that we take, for instance, to first action or to expecting action on behalf of the company.
In type II, it can be quite a range because, again, even if a risk is determined in general to be type II, if we have a vulnerable subpopulation that we're speaking of, then the timelines and what we deem reasonable could be very similar to type I in terms of its immediacy. Therefore, really, in that type II category there are a lot of factors. I can tell you that the criteria that go into what we deem reasonable are, obviously, the nature of the risk, vulnerable subpopulation, how much of a product has been sold in Canada and how widespread its use is.
Then, in type III, definitely the lowest of risks, we have more time—perhaps two, three weeks—but we still look for progress on the part of the regulated party: What is their plan? What is the critical path for implementing that plan? Even though the timeline is expanded, there are milestones along that timeline when we would expect to see certain progress met.
:
Thank you, Ms. Hollett.
That concludes our rounds of questions.
Please don't run away, colleagues. We have a couple of housekeeping matters to deal with.
To all of our witnesses, as always, thank you for your patience and professionalism in presenting to us today. Thank you for your service to Canada. You're welcome to stay, but you're free to leave.
Colleagues, there are three things.
Because we didn't get to the breast cancer screening report last week, it has been postponed to November 28.
We have two more meetings left for the opioid study. The witness panels for both have been confirmed, but we should set a date for the submission of briefs. I suggest Friday, November 22, for the submission of briefs on the opioid study. Is everyone okay with that?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: Thank you.
Finally, as this is something that should be dealt with in camera, I don't propose to raise it here, but I simply alert you that you're going to be receiving an email with respect to a group called “advancing cervical cancer screenings international consensus group”. It includes a professor from France who wants to meet with us in some format. Please pay attention to the email and get back to us, because it is time-sensitive but also sensitive enough that we shouldn't be discussing it in public.
That's all I have for you. Is it the will of the committee to adjourn the meeting?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: The meeting is adjourned.