The research indicates, for instance, that of all the silos in health spending, drugs or pharmaceutical products have made the largest contribution to improving human health outcomes, in extending life expectancies, and so on.
Beyond drugs, the other parts of the medical system actually have not insignificant but smaller impacts on the outcome of population health statistics, like life expectancy, which are influenced by things like general vaccination programs, treatment of sanitary sewage, general levels of economic development, and so on. So drugs are very important and should not be discounted.
In fact, if you look at the history of health spending, at some point governments began to view doctors as part of a cost problem, and then, on the basis of research published by Barer and Stoddart, they capped the supply of doctors and created what everybody believes now is the doctor shortage. Hospitals were also looked at as a cost problem, so mergers were forced and hospital beds were cut. Now we've run into problems with waiting times.
Now drugs are the third evil empire of health care spending and we're trying to do the same thing with drugs--ration access. I think this is the wrong way to go.
I guess I'm backing up here, going in reverse, by answering your second question first.
But with regard to your first question on the price of drugs in Canada versus the United States or the price of drugs in Canada versus international cases, evidence and research produced by Canada's own Patented Medicine Prices Review Board as well as the United States Food and Drug Administration have both shown that Canadian prices for brand-name drugs are at the international median of prices for the very same drugs, but they are far below U.S. prices, so it's far more affordable in Canada than it is in the United States.
For generic drugs, the prices are much higher in Canada than they are in other international jurisdictions. In fact, they are much higher than the lowest prices in the world, which are found in the United States. If you were to adjust those prices on the basis of currency equivalency, you would still find that for the top 100 selling generic products in 2003--a sample of data I found for myself--the average price difference is 78% higher in Canada, and three-quarters of the drugs that are common to both countries are priced higher in Canada than in the United States.
That's a significant inflation in generic prices, a price that is being obtained far above what a free market would produce using the proxy of the United States for their far more competitive drug market. In my opinion, that's where we should be focusing in terms of drug prices.