PEI

P.E.I.'s new $30M pharmacare deal will cover diabetes medication, birth control

The federal government announced more than $30 million over four years to pay for diabetes medication and supplies as well as contraceptives for Prince Edward Islanders. 

Island is 3rd province to sign up; the deal comes into effect on May 1

Two mean wearing suits stand behind a podium that says 'national pharmacare.'
P.E.I. Minister of Health and Wellness Mark McLane and federal Health Minister Mark Holland answer questions about the deal at an event in Charlottetown on Friday. (Kerry Campbell/CBC )

The federal government has announced more than $30 million over four years to help pay for diabetes medication and supplies and contraceptives for Prince Edward Islanders. 

The details of the deal aren't clear, but the province said the new money will cover 18 drugs for diabetes, as well expand coverage for test strips used to measure a diabetic person's blood sugar.

The federal government said there will be no copays under P.E.I.'s system but provincial officials said on Friday that some small copays will remain.

"We know when people get the medicine they need, they don't get sick," federal Health Minister Mark Holland said at a Charlottetown event marking the deal. "That's the health system we need." 

P.E.I. is the third province to sign up under the federal government's newest pharmacare program.

The deal will come into effect on the Island on May 1, 2025. 

'Logical places to start' 

Coverage of diabetes medication and contraceptives were "two logical places to start," said Holland. 

More than 17,000 Islanders were living with diagnosed diabetes in 2024, and there are many more without a diagnosis, according to Diabetes Canada. 

As P.E.I. signs another pharmacare deal with Ottawa, federal minister calls province 'ground zero'

2 days ago
Duration 2:40
With a change in the federal Liberal leadership just days away, the Trudeau government has announced a last-minute pharmacare deal with P.E.I. The new deal will provide coverage for diabetes supplies and contraceptives, and it puts P.E.I. in a unique position among all provinces, when it comes to plans for universal drug coverage. CBC's Kerry Campbell reports.

Out-of-pocket costs for diabetes treatments can range from $867 to $6,085 per year. 

"When you properly manage diabetes, it means you don't get other types of illnesses and you don't get sicker, so it really is a logical place to start," Holland said. 

As for contraceptives, the federal health minister said it is essential that women have autonomy over their own bodies. 

"To me, that's an issue of fundamental freedom," he said. 

The announcement on Friday was timely, coming just before International Women's Day on Saturday, said Jenn Redmond, P.E.I.'s minister responsible for the status of women. 

Woman stands in front of black curtain with P.E.I. flag visible over her shoulder.
'We are on the right path forward by making more common contraceptives more freely available across P.E.I.,' says Jenn Redmond, minister responsible for the status of women. (Kerry Campbell/CBC)

"Everyone deserves a right to make informed decisions around their health and their bodies," said Redmond. 

"We are on the right path forward by making more common contraceptives more freely available across P.E.I." 

Rare disease medication 

The federal government also announced another $10 million over four years to help P.E.I. diagnose and treat rare diseases. 

"When it comes to drugs for rare diseases, it's not something that many Islanders have to deal with. But for those who do, it can be devastating to get a diagnosis," Holland said. About one in 12 people are diagnosed with a rare disease, he said. 

P.E.I. is really ground zero for national pharmacare.— Mark Holland

The new deal announced Friday serves as a counterproposal to a previous agreement made between Ottawa and P.E.I., which works with existing insurance programs to reduce copays for patients. 

Both deals are considered pilot projects, Holland said. 

"We now have the ability here in P.E.I. to look at both at the same time and evaluate which is the best model," he said. 

"P.E.I. is really ground zero for national pharmacare."

With files from Kerry Campbell