I can't speak to specific statistics around that, but clearly this is a concern across Canada. The issue of patients selling prescription drugs is not unique to one jurisdiction. We've seen this for years. It speaks to some of the challenges that I was alluding to before at the individual patient-practitioner level. In conversation with a patient, it's very difficult for the practitioner to say, “Oh, this seems like the kind of person who would go and sell these drugs.”
You have to understand that the patient is presenting.... Some of these people are very good. If this is their livelihood, they become quite good at this. They present with a lot of pain. They present with a very convincing story, and sometimes they do this to multiple practitioners on the same day. Sometimes it's a primary care provider, but more often it's a walk-in clinic or an emergency room where there's not an established relationship and it's one-off meeting between that doctor and patient.
There are huge challenges for those health care practitioners to really get to the root of some of these problems and to understand how these medications are being used.
There are a number of things that can be put in place to try to mitigate that like prescription monitoring programs, so that a doctor can call up the history in real time and say, “Oh, they were just at the emergency department yesterday and they were prescribed the exact same medications they're asking me for now.”
They need more time to have those conversations and to screen for addiction potential, but also to screen for risk factors in terms of patients who might turn around and sell those drugs. Again, there's no perfect solution to this. There are a number of things that need to be put in place.
It is very challenging for front-line physicians and other health care providers to determine in very rapid sequence what will happen to those medications after they're dispensed.