Currently, there are critical gaps in what is covered in terms of diabetic supplies and devices in every province and territory in Canada.
I'm remiss in not having mentioned an insulin pump because I have been wearing one for 23 years and literally couldn't live without it.
In this day and age, it's actually kind of shocking to me that we're still at the point where, in many provinces, there is no coverage for insulin pumps or that coverage is limited by age. In some places, they are only covered for children until age 25. Type 1 diabetes is not a disease we have any cure for; it certainly doesn't disappear when you're 25. In fact, the longer you have it, typically, the more complications you're at risk for, etc.
Currently, no province is getting this right. Further to Dr. Whiteside's comments in response to Mr. Ayoub's question, I think there is currently a lack of leadership, and that leadership can't come from one body. It has to be a collaboration among all of the actors that are affecting the health care system: provincial and federal governments and civil society organizations like ours that advocate for the patients. The private sector also has a role to play in making these really valuable interventions available to everyone. The companies that manufacture insulin pumps, test strips and syringes have a role to play in making them more ubiquitously available in a manner that's sustainable for our economy.