Thank you for your comments here today.
Generally when I look at a government program or any program that's involved in Canada—and I realize this is certainly provincially initiated—I look at how it affects the residents in the riding of Barrie, who I have the pleasure and honour of representing. There have been three occasions where I have had concerns brought to me about the common drug review. I want to bring them up and then get your comments, because I realize when we look at this that there's certainly a balance required between safety and prudence and, on the other hand, access and a patient focus. My concern is on the latter part in terms of the access and the patient focus.
I have had three examples brought to me by constituents. I had a daughter who came into my office and expressed concerns that Iressa was not available to her mother, who was suffering from cancer, and she complained about delays in Ottawa. You saw the frustration in her face and how it affected her family, and in that case it appeared that we had been a hurdle. I understand it has been approved in some provincial jurisdictions, but for some reason, with the common drug review, we inhibited what her doctor had told her mother would be something that would be helpful. I'm interested to know how that emerged.
Another example was a rare disease, Pompe disease. There was a resident in Barrie who suffered from that, and there was a drug available that was approved in Europe. It was approved by Health Canada, but it wasn't approved by the common drug review.
I also had a group of young individuals who suffer from type 2 diabetes who expressed concern about the length of time it takes to go through our channels.
You hear these examples, and I'm sure there are many you don't hear about. What are your sentiments? Is the benefit to safety outweighing this benefit for access? Are there examples of how this has helped with safety and prudence? Are there examples like this, that we're really losing on the other end?