That's absolutely fascinating to me, and certainly for Canadians listening at home I would suggest to you that this is an absolute travesty to independent practitioners. I guess I would like to implore my physician colleagues on this committee to make comments with respect to this.
That is not to say that mistakes in medicine don't happen, and there is potential for inappropriate prescribing, but I guess what I would suggest is that I would love to hear their comments with respect to the government creating an agency that is then going to potentially monitor physicians in their prescribing of the appropriate medications, and in deprescribing, which is not a new concept—and then there's the suggestion that the government knows best with respect to what your physician should be prescribing or not.
Realistically, that's why doctors go to medical school: to understand the right patient, the right drug and the right diagnosis. Now, for all my physician colleagues out there, that's not always easy. This is an inexact science, and we know that even with long-term relationships with patients and appropriate examination and testing, oftentimes the diagnosis still remains elusive or that, certainly, the specific diagnosis may not be in keeping with what the patient may like it to be or what it actually is, or we may actually lack the ability to access appropriate specialist consultation to come to the appropriate diagnosis.
The wait times, which I mentioned previously, are, sadly, the longest wait times that we have had in Canada in recorded history, since we've been keeping that time in the last 30 years. The wait time from seeing a family physician to seeing a specialist and obtaining specialist care is over six months.
When we begin to hear that now we're going to have a “government knows best” approach, I wish I could interpret it differently. I can't. When I hear those things, I want to take my parliamentarian hat off and put on a doctor hat and say: “Really? I need the Canadian drug agency to talk to me about patient safety, outcomes, system sustainability and appropriate use strategies?”
When we begin to look at this and the incredible difficulty of how you might roll this out, it makes me want to not just add an amendment—as in CPC-12, “respecting the autonomy of Canada's highly trained health care practitioners”—but to get rid of the entire paragraph. This is an affront to the autonomy of physicians, pharmacists, nurse practitioners and, in the future, physicians' assistants, with respect to their training, to suggest that now we are going to have a government agency as the intervenor, saying, “Well, you know, maybe you don't know exactly what you're doing here, and we need the Canadian drug agency to talk to you about patient safety, health outcomes and system sustainability.”
First of all, let's let's talk about patient safety. I can only imagine that, heaven forbid, I'm practising as a physician and my good friend and colleague Mr. Doherty comes into the office and and I have to wait for a memo from the Canadian drug agency to tell me what is appropriate to prescribe to him and what isn't. What did I go to school all those years for?
The interaction between the patient and the physician coming to a mutually agreed-upon diagnosis and treatment plan and follow-up and appropriate prescribing with respect to the contraindications, the indications and the potential side effects are sacrosanct in medicine. That is what Canadians already expect.
Now, if they're not getting that, and if that's the assertion here in this bill, that Canadians are not getting that....
Ms. Boudreau, I want to reassure you that just because I'm looking in your direction, I'm not directing my ire at you. That's not the point here.
I'm directing comments only in your direction. I don't mean to make you feel that way. I direct my ire at the folks who created this ridiculous clause inside a bill to suggest—as I stated earlier, we're talking about patient safety—that a prescriber doesn't have the appropriate abilities to understand patient safety associated with drug X, Y or Z or the ability to appropriately understand the potential drug interactions and monitor potential side effects as required.
That is what prescribers go to school for. That's why physicians go to school. That's why you're there. The biggest tool you have, besides being a good diagnostician as a physician, is related to the things you have in your tool box, which would be related specifically, in the majority of cases, to medications.
When you go to see a physician, oddly enough, historically, when no one else could prescribe medications, guess what you came out of the physician's office with? Does anybody want to guess? Well, it was a prescription, 85% of the time. That is what made physicians unique. It still does.
When you go to see the physician, you would like advice. You would like understanding. You would like explanation. Whether we like it or not, whether we want to admit it or not, we would like someone to fix the dang problem we went in there with. If I go in with a sore big toe, I don't want to come out with a sore big toe and no plan to fix it. I want someone to say, “This is what we're going to do about it. Through all my years of training and practice and experience, and my knowledge of you personally, that's what we're going to do. We have a plan.”
Whether you're a primary care provider or a specialist, it doesn't matter. If you don't care enough as a Canadian-trained and internationally trained physician or as a prescriber to know that there's a person behind what you're doing, and that they have to be safe and receive trustworthy advice and intervention and prescribing from you, then, my goodness, the last thing we need is a darn government agency trying to say, “Hey, you'd better reconsider what it is you're doing and what you're prescribing.” My goodness, think of how cumbersome that will be: “Just a minute, Mr. Doherty, I have to get the Canadian drug agency on the phone. I'll call the 1-800-WHO-CARES phone number, and they'll get back to me in six months.”
Of course, I'm being facetious.... I'm sorry; I trust I'm being facetious; there's no plan within this pamphlet to suggest that I'm not.
That being said, on the ridiculous nature of saying that we need an agency, I'll come to the other points and talk first and foremost about patient safety.
If you have a prescriber in your life who's not primarily concerned about your safety, then you're in deep trouble. You will not be safe. It doesn't matter if we have a Canadian drug agency or a CDA or an LMNOPQRSTUVWXY and Z agency who's there to protect your safety; you're in deep trouble.
Next, health outcomes are incredibly important, but it all comes down to not necessarily just nationwide or countrywide health outcomes. It also comes down to your personal health outcomes. Again, if we're going to make an agency of the Government of Canada, which is the most inefficient agency, one that can't....
In this government, sadly, they can't issue passports. They can't pay their bills on time. They certainly can't manage inflation. They can't build houses, even though we all know that this is not within the purview of the federal government. There's an inability to provide primary health care, as we've already talked about, to seven million to 10 million Canadians. There is an inability—