The determinants of health are multivariate. They are related to physical health, genetics, the environment, and other social factors such as housing, income, employment, education, etc. To say that the cost of pharmaceuticals, as an example relevant to this conversation, is the only or the most important determinant of health would be giving undue weight to that particular dimension of health.
However, where we have the greatest challenge is with the TPP, and you look at all the determinants of health and pharmaceuticals as a part of that. They play a very important role in helping people maintain health, all other determinants of health being equal. To introduce additional layers of barriers to that one mechanism for maintaining health or managing chronic disease just makes a very important piece of the health of Canadians that much more challenging. I guess that's the challenge that this committee has to weigh.
I have no doubt that there are business benefits for agriculture, for the pharmaceutical industry, and for the auto industry with this trade agreement, but whether there are intended or unintended consequences that affect other sectors and more Canadians than just those involved in those sectors is really the challenge that you have to weigh. Do the benefits for the few outweigh the benefits for the many? The Canadian Nurses Association would stand strongly on the side that this agreement is balanced against the benefits for all Canadians.