Thank you for that question. It's certainly an issue that is talked about in many different forums and formats in the medical profession.
I can think of a reference to some of the work we've done around senior care, and in our document on a senior strategy, we do talk about de-prescribing and some of the issues around polypharmacy. It is something that the profession is aware of and there's certainly a movement.
You may be familiar with the Choosing Wisely type of program whereby we're looking not only at the issue of prescriptions but also at how to ensure that the use of health care resources, tests, and procedures is necessary and in the patient's best interest. There is a lot of focus within the medical profession on professional education around prescribing.
I do agree that being overly controlling, from a federal government point of view, could be a problem in practice, that there does need to be some flexibility for physicians to use clinical judgment. However, at the same time, some of the formularies do look at the cost-benefit ratios and can contribute to lowering some of the costs when it comes to looking at which of the drugs gives the same value at the lowest cost.
That's often a helpful thing. I find myself being educated on a daily basis with regard to our provincial pharmacare program when a pharmacist calls and says that one drug isn't covered and that another one is much less expensive. Those things are happening on the ground every day.
One of the things that we also mentioned, though, was the concept of e-prescribing and support for electronic prescribing as well. That is something that the federal government could assist with in terms of national support. This would not only allow a national database but also allow physicians to communicate electronically with the pharmacies and to have that information on which prescriptions patients are taking.
Sometimes, as a family physician, I don't actually know all the prescriptions my patients are taking because they may come from different sources, such as the emergency room or a walk-in clinic, so I think a key component to improving pharmaceutical prescribing in Canada is to have a means of prescribing electronically so we can share data from across the country.
I hope that answers your question.