Canada delays new drug-pricing regulations until January 2022
OTTAWA — The first big overhaul of Canada’s patented medicines pricing regime in three decades is being delayed for the third time.
The Patented Medicine Pricing Review Board is supposed to ensure prices for new pharmaceuticals in Canada aren’t excessive.
In 2019, the government published new regulations to guide the board’s work, adjusting the countries used for comparison purposes and introducing new economic conditions to help determine whether proposed prices are unreasonable.
The government said then that the changes could cut drug prices by $13 billion over the next decade and they were set to take effect July 1, 2020. Health Minister Patty Hajdu agreed to delay them six months because of the pandemic and then days before the Jan. 1 implementation date, she delayed them again until July 1, 2021. On Tuesday, she delayed them further until January 2022.


