Providing Canadians free medication could mean health-care savings, study suggests | Only Sports And Health



Results from a program providing free prescription drugs to 747 patients in Ontario suggest covering medication costs produces overall savings for the health-care system — an average of $1,488 per patient per year, according to a new study.

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22 thoughts on “Providing Canadians free medication could mean health-care savings, study suggests | Only Sports And Health

  1. Gov’ts need to grow a pair & tell big pharma & the insurance conglomerates to shove it. Start saving money so we can hire more medical staff. We’re already so short-handed as it is.

  2. If people switched their diet from meat and dairy and fast food to a whole food plant based diet over 80 percent of chronic diseases could be prevented resulting in a much healthier population and savings of many billions of dollars. Focusing on treating a problem rather than on preventing it is not the way to go.

  3. Let's not forget that the Liberals and the Conservatives consistently vote together, against the NDP, to stop this from happening. Pierre Poilievre is on record repeating that disproven lie, that nationalized pharmacare would lead to higher costs overall. Remember that the next time you simp for him.

  4. when the government is footing the bill they are also much more proactive on controlling drug prices with legislation so there is way less price gouging from big pharma.

  5. It's shameful Canada hasn't included medications and dental care in our "universal" healthcare. Treating all people with dignity AND saving money, and instead our government supports the pharmacy companies profits over our populations well-being.

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