NDP calls on Nova Scotia government to reduce or waive pharmacare co-payments
“NDP Leader Claudia Chender says a way the Nova Scotia government could acknowledge the hardships people are facing amid rising cost-of-living pressures would be to waive or reduce the co-pay requirement for the seniors and family pharmacare programs.
Chender called on Premier Tim Houston to take the step during question period on Tuesday at Province House.
"For so many people who need access to life-saving drugs, they have a choice of whether to pay for food or pay for medicine," she told the legislature.
The premier, who did not speak to reporters following question period, told Chender he would see what is possible.
Chender later told reporters that removing the co-pay would be "an elegant solution" to help some of the lowest earners in the province save upwards of $1,000.
"We know that our population is older and sicker than the rest of the country and folks pay a lot for medicine and a lot of folks right now just aren't taking it," she said.
"So what does that do? More pressure on our ERs."
Chender said she'd also like to see the government eventually index the threshold for the pharmacare programs. Seniors who qualify for provincial pharmacare pay a premium based on their income and a maximum annual co-payment of $382. The co-payment for the family pharmacare program is 20 per cent of a prescription price. The annual maximum is calculated based on the size and income of a family.
. . .”