Access to Innovation | 51 Available

Access to Innovation focuses on the value of medical innovation in Canada’s health care system. It examines issues that impact the availability to patients of innovative medicines and technologies.

Underlying chronic conditions significantly increase hospital spending in Canada

According to a recent report from the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), which examined 2.4 million recorded hospital stays (outside of Quebec), an average patient stay in Canada costs almost $7,000. The study also concluded that underlying chronic conditions or their complications account for almost 30% of money spent on inpatient care in Canadian acute care hospitals.

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April 21, 2008


Treatment of rare disorders: U.S and Europe enact legislation to encourage innovation and access while Canada lags behind.

As American and European regulators make strides in encouraging innovation and improving access to treatments for patients with rare disorders, Canada lags farther behind.

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December 14, 2007


Generic drug savings? Canadian consumers pay significantly more for generic drugs than Americans.

Canadian consumers continue to pay high prices for generic drugs according to a recent report by the Competition Bureau. Generic drug manufacturers vying for shelf space in pharmacies often offer deep rebates to pharmacies as incentives to select a particular manufacturer's product. These rebates are not typically reflected in amounts paid for drugs by public or private drug plans, or out of pocket by consumers.

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December 05, 2007


Last year, prescription drugs were the smallest component of government health care spending growth in Canada

New medicines that treat or prevent disease have contributed significantly to declining hospitalization rates and better health outcomes in Canada. Rather than laud the role that health technology innovation has played in improving both the cost-effectiveness and quality of health care, policy makers and health industry critics in Canada have claimed that access to new drug therapies should be constrained because drugs have been the fastest growing component of health care spending in Canada. Canadian national health expenditure data refutes that claim.

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July 05, 2007


Canada accuse un certain retard par rapport aux États-Unis dans le combat contre le cancer

Au cours des cinq dernières années, le taux comparatif de mortalité au Canada est passé de 180,4 à 173,7 par tranche de 100 000 personnes, soit une amélioration de 3,7 %. Cependant, durant cette même période, le taux de mortalité aux États-Unis a connu une amélioration deux fois plus élevée, connaissant une baisse de 7,5 %.

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May 21, 2007


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