As you say, there are so many good examples internationally, and Bethanys Hope is a wonderful group. They really are typical of many of our patient organizations that, as you say, are made up of parents who are doing fundraising, trying to raise awareness, and trying to develop a patient community so that if in fact research is being done or clinical trials are being done, they have patients who are identified and who can enter into that.
I will say that sometimes people misunderstand what an orphan drug regulatory framework could do for Canada. The biggest thing it could do for Canada is bring Canada into the research and development scheme.
We have researchers and small companies in Canada that are doing exactly what Bethanys Hope is raising funds to do. We have many examples of where in fact they actually discover the cause of a disease, and they actually discover a treatment that could be developed for that disease. In many cases, because we don't provide the facilitative support in Canada, these companies pick up and move elsewhere because there are more incentives to develop there, so Canada becomes only a buyer of drugs, not a contributor.
The other sad point is that many of our patients then don't get into the clinical trials. When we're talking about a progressive disease, you want to get your child or your family member in as soon as possible. In developing those communities, there are many examples in Canada, and many of these groups are also connected internationally, which is a big bonus, but quite frankly, that regulatory framework would help us support the research and development in Canada and engage more patients in terms of clinical trials.
At the pharmacare end, in Europe right now we're seeing the emergence of international programs. The EMA approves drugs for all of Europe, but each country there has been traditionally purchasing their own drugs, sort of like the provinces in Canada. What's emerging, in fact, are international programs. Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands are coming together to create international purchasing, and Austria and Romania and others are coming together to say that they need to work together at a European level, not just to get better pricing, which could in fact happen.... The pricing comes not because they're better negotiators, but because they can provide a better volume discount. If you can guarantee me x number of patients and you are willing to risk-share with us the introduction of these patients, we can actually introduce at a lower price and we can demand a lower price.
There's no upside for the patient in having very expensive drugs. We are very committed to bringing in drugs as cost-effectively as possible, and that means we can actually cover more people. We're also very committed, as I think both Professors Herder and McCabe said, to making sure that the drugs are available to patients as they work. But again, we have to work in collaboration. We have to work internationally. There are not enough patients in Canada with many of these diseases for us to know over a period of time, or at least know more quickly....
So I think it's very much the case. We have so many of these small patient groups that are working hard in Canada, and oftentimes collaboratively as part of international organizations to bring in these drugs. What we want to do is to give Canadians a fair shot. Right now, we're not doing that. I think that's the challenge. We're not doing it at the research and clinical trial level, and we're not doing it at the reimbursement level. If we would work together, we could do it better. If we would work internationally, we could do it really well.