Feds approve Alberta government importation of kids’ pain medications but confusion lingers | 24CA News
There’s lingering confusion over whether or not Health Canada has absolutely permitted the “exceptional importation” of pediatric drugs procured by the federal government of Alberta.
In late 2022, the province introduced it discovered a producer to import 5 million bottles of liquid kids’s acetaminophen and ibuprofen.
In December, 250,000 bottles of acetaminophen had been permitted to be used in hospitals.
The remaining 4.75 million bottles are break up between acetaminophen and ibuprofen. The acetaminophen — which is a majority of the youngsters’s drugs procured by Alberta — has been permitted for import as of Jan. 26.
Read extra:
Alberta’s 1st cargo of child’s ache reliever arrives at Edmonton airport
Read subsequent:
Parents abandon their ticketless child at Israeli airport check-in
In an announcement to Global News, Health Canada confirmed the approval.
“On Jan. 26, 2023, after a thorough review and discussions with the company and the government of Alberta, Health Canada approved the exceptional importation of Turkish-authorized pediatric acetaminophen with child-resistant packaging for distribution and sale behind the counter in community pharmacies in Alberta,” it mentioned in an announcement.
“This decision is reflected on the online list of products eligible for importation.”
“Health Canada’s review of the proposal for Turkish-authorized pediatric ibuprofen is ongoing.”
The model identify of the procured kids’s acetaminophen from Turkey is Parol (150mL), which is available in liquid kind and is supposed for youths between two and 11 years outdated.
“The information posted by Health Canada today is a big step toward the goal of getting these medications into the hands of families who are waiting for them,” Steve Buick, Health Minister Jason Copping’s press secretary, mentioned in a written assertion.
He mentioned Alberta Health is “hopeful” to get “final approval very soon for the remaining 4.75 million bottles of children’s pain and fever medications that we’ve procured.”
“We’re looking to confirm directly with Health Canada that they have approved importation of the outstanding acetaminophen products, so that we can finalize plans to bring them to Canada for parents who are waiting for them,” Buick advised Global News.
It’s unclear when the treatment will begin to seem on retailer cabinets.
“Assuming we get confirmation, we can have them here very soon, potentially within a couple of weeks,” Buick mentioned.
“We’ll also continue working to secure Health Canada’s approval on the outstanding ibuprofen products.”
Read extra:
Children’s ache treatment to proceed to be ‘intermittently available’: Health Canada
Read subsequent:
Nestle to cut, slice and freeze gross sales of Delissio, Lean Cuisine in Canada
When Health Canada was knowledgeable of Buick’s feedback, it issued Global News one other assertion.
“Health Canada has approved the importation of this product. Before it is imported, released and distributed for sale, risk communications and product labelling must be finalized by the importer,” a spokesperson for the company mentioned.
Mount Royal University political scientist Duane Bratt calls the ordeal complicated.
“Either this is a massive miscommunication that is just exacerbated over and over again because they’re not listening or reading — that’s one possibility — the second I guess, is maybe there’s a problem with the shipment,” he mentioned.
David Shepherd, the Opposition NDP well being critic, mentioned the medicine are arriving too late to make a distinction.
“The fact that the government’s procurement of medication will finally arrive when the crisis has passed and it is no longer needed, shows how deeply inept the UCP are at managing health care,” he mentioned in an announcement.
Meantime, pharmacists and households proceed to battle as an ongoing scarcity of fever and ache treatment continues throughout Canada.
However, they are saying the answer isn’t simply extra pediatric acetaminophen — medicine for adults are wanted too.
“This is not just a cough and cold thing — not a kid problem — we can’t get several things that should be in a supply chain,” mentioned Bob McQueen, a pharmacist at a Medicine Shoppe location in Edmonton.
McQueen mentioned his parmacy is experiencing shortages of a number of merchandise, together with kids’s ibuprofen, cough and chilly drugs for each children and adults, kids’s anibiotics (particularly penicillin), grownup ache relievers resembling Tylenol #3 and merchandise containing codeine, grownup acetaminophen, child’s Gravol anti-nausea treatment, and Ensure meal alternative merchandise.
“Please find us the cough and cold medicines.”
© 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.