Canada News
Manitoba 1st province to strike pharmacare deal with federal government
By Arturo Chang, CBC News, RCI

The federal government passed legislation setting the basis for a universal pharmacare plan in October, committing $1.5 billion for birth control and diabetes medications as it looked to strike deals with provinces and territories on coverage.
(Pexels photo)
Province will receive $219M to cover medications for diabetes, birth control and other conditions
Manitoba has become the first province to sign a pharmacare agreement with the federal government.
The province will be getting 9 million over four years for universal coverage for diabetes medication, contraceptives and other medical supplies.
Coverage for most of the products in the agreement will begin in June, it said. Manitoba already covers the cost of birth control.
The agreement will help close gaps in the health-care system, federal Health Minister Mark Holland said Thursday during the announcement at the Women’s Health Clinic in Winnipeg.
I want 100 years from now people to look back at this moment and say, ‘This is where it started,’ the journey of making sure everybody got the medication that they needed,
he said.
WATCH | Minister defends timeline of Manitoba pharmacare deal:
The federal government passed legislation setting the basis for a universal pharmacare plan in October (new window), committing $1.5 billion for birth control and diabetes medications as it looked to strike deals with provinces and territories on coverage.
Manitoba started covering birth control for those with a prescription in the fall (new window).
Menopause drug coverage
Provincial Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara said the new funding will allow the province to expand coverage to hormone replacement therapy.
Women and those who need access to menopause drugs and those medications will now have access, which is a huge game-changer,
they said.
The federal government said it will also provide $48 million as part of its national plan to improve access to diagnosis, screening and medication for rare diseases.
The pharmacare program was part of a supply-and-confidence deal between the Liberals and federal NDP that kept the minority government in power starting in March 2022.
Holland said aiming for implementation in June — which will likely be after a federal election because the agreement with the NDP has collapsed — was necessary to get things right
so the plan doesn’t have flaws opponents can use to criticize it and dismantle it.
When asked, Holland acknowledged he was opening himself up to accusations the government was delaying the implementation of the deal for political gain.
The reality is there are restraints,
he said. There are restraints on money, there are restraints on the ability to deliver, and so that’s reflected in how fast we can go. But look, as fast as we can go, we’ll go.
In a statement, federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh congratulated the province for signing the agreement, but called on the Liberal government to move faster to get the rest of the deals inked.
The federal government has the necessary legislation and the funding in hand to sign agreements with the other 12 provinces and territories, the statement said.
Every day the Liberals drag their feet is another day that Canadians are pulling out their wallets and paying for prescriptions that the law says should be free now,
Singh said in the statement.
Marci Ien, federal minister for women and gender equality, announced at Thursday’s event that the government will also provide $10 million to renovate the Women’s Health Clinic (new window) in Winnipeg.
With files from Ian Froese
This article is republished from RCI.
