Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thanks to all the witnesses for being here.
Your remarks are interesting. You're giving us good information.
I'd like to go to you, Mr. Morin and Ms. Pelletier.
Pharmacists will definitely play a major role in the future of drug insurance.
Yesterday a large group of nearly two million Quebeckers, including members of the Centrale des syndicats démocratiques, the CSD, the Confédération des syndicats nationaux, the CSN, the Fédération des travailleurs et travailleuses du Québec, the FTQ, the Union des consommateurs, the Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec and many other organizations, had this to say about the present situation in Quebec:
…the current Quebec drug insurance program can in no way guarantee all Quebeckers reasonable and fair access to drugs…“The various fees charged to drug purchasers are in fact copayments that have a deterrent effect: People skip doses or deprive themselves of certain drugs because they can't afford to buy them”…Furthermore, rising drug costs also put increasing pressure on private plans, leading workplaces to abandon their insurance and thus lose all their coverage.
These groups are calling for parliamentarians to pass Bill C-64.
You've obviously raised the matter of the formulary of drugs that will be covered. That aspect will be negotiated with the Quebec government. Other countries are fortunate to have universal, public drug coverage without any pharmacy closures.
Do you think it's important to ensure universal access to drugs that keep people alive and in good health, while being careful to negotiate repayment and to pay attention to how pharmacists are affected by this universal public system?
Is that the message you want to send today?