Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to go back to a question I had asked earlier. I gather that you didn't have the time to answer it because my time was up.
I don't think I would get disagreement from any one of the officials around the table that in fact if you are going to make good public policy, or if you are going to make any kind of good health decisions, then you have to look at evidence. Evidence drives it all. Outcome drives everything.
I had asked earlier about HAART, the active antiretroviral programs that go on in British Columbia. British Columbia is the only province in Canada that has this program.
It has caused a decrease. If we're talking about outcomes, then, what is it we're seeing in terms of evidence? The evidence is that British Columbia, since it adopted this program, is the only place—the only province, place, anywhere in North America—where the number of new cases of HIV is going down dramatically. Everywhere else, in every other province in Canada, and in the United States, it is going up, remarkably up.
In fact, I would like to tell you that in 1995 there were 18 cases per 100,000 in British Columbia. Now there are six cases per 100,000. That's a huge drop.
In Saskatchewan, for example, there were two per 100,000 in 1995. There were 16 per 100,000 in 2011.
Everywhere, in every jurisdiction, this has been proven to be important. We know that the medication stops the transmission of the virus because the virus is gone. It is not present in the blood.
I would hope that given the cost of taking care of every patient with new HIV, this would become a really important thing for the Canadian government to adopt, or for anyone to keep looking at, when this has been going on now for quite a while in British Columbia.
In fact, Brazil has adopted this policy wholeheartedly. The United Kingdom has adopted this treatment wholeheartedly. France has adopted the treatment wholeheartedly. We also see that the U.S. is already onside to adopt it wholeheartedly.
This should be, as I said, a triumph for Canada. This is a Canadian initiative, done here, built here. We should be proud of this.
No one wants to even speak to the people from the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS. Well, no one at the political level; I'm sure bureaucrats have been speaking. What is it that prevents, with such remarkable outcomes, Health Canada from even looking at this in a way that...?
You can say that we're continuing to assess it, but it's been assessed. It's been assessed internationally. Peer reviews have shown that it works. The World Health Organization is saying that everyone should adopt it. China has adopted it, for crying out loud.
I just want to know why, when we could save lives and save costs in the health care system for every new case that we don't get, we are doing this. We could take that money and put it elsewhere in the system.
I just want to understand what is driving the decision to completely ignore and not adopt this when British Columbia is now being asked to international conferences. British Columbia is not Canada, but British Columbia is being asked to come and sit at the table with other nation-states.
Can someone explain this to me?