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Manitoba pharmacists will soon have ability to prescribe birth control, HIV medications
Manitoba pharmacists will soon have ability to prescribe birth control, HIV medications

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Manitoba pharmacists will soon have ability to prescribe birth control, HIV medications

Pharmacists in Manitoba will soon be able to prescribe birth control, the province's health minister revealed this week in an announcement that came as a pleasant surprise to the industry. Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara told the legislature Wednesday that granting pharmacists the means to assess and prescribe contraceptives is a "very reasonable expansion of scope for pharmacists in Manitoba." The minister added in an interview the government is moving "very quickly" on the changes, which will take effect "in the coming days and weeks." "We're trying to get it out the door as quickly as we can for pharmacists across the province who have been asking for this for years," they said. Pharmacists will also be able to prescribe HIV medications beginning this summer, a government official said. Manitoba, Ontario and the three territories are the only places in Canada that do not currently allow pharmacists to prescribe birth control. Emergency contraceptives, such as the Plan B pill, are currently available without a prescription from pharmacies. "Right now in Manitoba, pharmacists do not have the ability to practise at their full scope, the way that they should," said Asagwara, who pledged "to go even further" in granting pharmacists more prescribing authority. Members of the industry association Pharmacists Manitoba were in the legislature to watch question period Wednesday, after they were informed that Liberal MLA Cindy Lamoureux would ask questions about pharmacists' scope of practice. In her first question, Lamoureux asked if the government planned to "enable and empower pharmacists who directly assess and prescribe contraception." The question prompted a sometimes rare occurrence in question period: a direct answer to the question posed. "The short answer to that question, for the member of Tyndall Park, is yes," Asagwara said. Britt Kural, the pharmacy practice adviser with Pharmacists Manitoba, said she was "pleasantly surprised" by the response. "We had no idea that there was going to be something right around the corner," said Kural. The pharmacist said she believes she and her colleagues will be able to prescribe products like daily oral birth control pills, hormonal injections and IUDs, but the province hasn't provided those details yet. Currently, a patient must go to a doctor's office or a nurse practitioner to receive a prescription for birth control, and must then visit a pharmacist to pick it up. This regulatory change will save patients from seeing a doctor or nurse practitioner. "Quite often pharmacists are a first point of care for many people in Manitoba, because they don't have access to a primary care physician or a nurse practitioner, especially in rural and remote communities," Kural said. She couldn't estimate what kind of uptake pharmacists will see, but said her profession is eager to help. Women's Health Clinic executive director Kemlin Nembhard said any step toward making prescription birth control more accessible is worth celebrating. The change will make contraceptives easier to access for people without a family doctor, or for young people who worry about their parents finding out, she said. While Manitoba's NDP government has been offering free prescription birth control since October of last year, Nembhard said some hurdles to accessing these contraceptives persist, such as the requirement to have a health card. It's one of the reasons the clinic runs a free birth control program, funded entirely through donations. "It would be great for us to get funding through the province to support that program," Nembhard said. Kural said Manitoba's pharmacists would like to further expand their prescribing authority. Some options could include prescriptions to treat the minor ailments pharmacists are already assessing, such as strep throat, ear infections and cold sores, Kural said. Any such move would require regulatory changes from the province.

32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in 1st months of province's free contraceptive plan
32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in 1st months of province's free contraceptive plan

Yahoo

time23-03-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in 1st months of province's free contraceptive plan

Nearly 32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in the first four months after the rollout of a free prescription contraceptives program, the province says. Under the program, launched last October, eligible residents can access 60 commonly used birth control methods, including contraceptive pills, intrauterine devices (IUDs), hormonal implants and contraceptive injections. Oral contraceptives — often referred to as "the pill" — were the most commonly dispensed product between Oct. 1 and Jan. 31, a government spokesperson told CBC Manitoba in an emailed statement, with 31,931 individuals getting a prescription dispensed under the plan over that period. However, the spokesperson said the province could not provide any information on the number of people who opted for the pill compared to those who requested alternatives like IUDs and hormonal injections. When the plan, which was estimated to cost the province about $11 million annually, was announced last year, Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara said it would save individuals hundreds of dollars, suggesting it could save up to $10,000 over a person's lifetime. "Costs should never be a barrier to you receiving the health care you need, and we all know that reproductive health care is health care," Asagwara said at an August news conference. Manitoba's latest budget, released Thursday, promises another $7 million to include copper IUDs and Plan B emergency contraceptives — sometimes called the "morning-after pill" — under the free birth control plan. Previously, only hormonal IUDs were covered. Under a change announced in this week's budget, the province is putting up another $7 million in funding to include copper IUDs and Plan B emergency contraceptives under the free birth control plan. Previously, only hormonal IUDs were covered. (Ben Nelms/CBC) While pills are the most common contraceptive, Kemlin Nembhard, executive director at Women's Health Clinic in Winnipeg, says the clinic has noticed an increase in requests for IUDs — a small, T-shaped, intrauterine device that can protect against pregnancy for nearly a decade. "The hormonal IUD can provide protection for up to eight years, so that's eight years where you're not having to think every day, 'did I take my pill?'" said Nembhard, adding IUDs can offer discreet protection for people in abusive situations who may be at risk if pills are discovered. "It really does provide this level of autonomy for somebody that sometimes a pill does not." Women's Health Clinic executive director Kemlin Nembhard said the province's program has made it more affordable for people to access IUDs. (Jaison Empson/CBC) However, IUDs can cost up to $600, Nembhard says, making them more expensive upfront compared to $25 per month pills. "Now that we have this new program, it makes it more affordable for people to be able to do that," she said. The clinic had been calling for an expansion of the provincial program to include copper IUDs and Plan B since the plan was announced, and Nembhard says she's happy to see some gaps filled in this week's budget. "It's great that the Manitoba government is doing this. Even though there's things I wish they would add to it, hands down, it's great," she said. "This is what democracy is about." For decades, the Women's Health Clinic has offered free birth control to Winnipeggers and would like to see the government follow suit and add barrier methods like condoms, which also protect against sexually transmitted diseases, to its plan, said Nembhard. Despite some gaps, Haran Vijayanathan, the community health and wellness director at Klinic Community Health, said the program shows the NDP government is "taking steps in the right direction." "We're able to offer more informed conversations so people can make informed decisions about the health care that they are receiving, and the contraceptives that might work for them in their particular situation," Vijayanathan said, adding he'd like to see vulnerable populations who might not have access to health cards included in the plan in the future. "When the cost is taken away from it, then options become more available."

32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in 1st months of province's free contraceptive plan
32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in 1st months of province's free contraceptive plan

CBC

time23-03-2025

  • Health
  • CBC

32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in 1st months of province's free contraceptive plan

Social Sharing Nearly 32,000 Manitobans accessed birth control in the first four months after the rollout of a free prescription contraceptives program, the province says. Under the program, launched last October, eligible residents can access 60 commonly used birth control methods, including contraceptive pills, intrauterine devices (IUDs), hormonal implants and contraceptive injections. Oral contraceptives — often referred to as "the pill" — were the most commonly dispensed product between Oct. 1 and Jan. 31, a government spokesperson told CBC Manitoba in an emailed statement, with 31,931 individuals getting a prescription dispensed under the plan over that period. However, the spokesperson said the province could not provide any information on the number of people who opted for the pill compared to those who requested alternatives like IUDs and hormonal injections. When the plan, which was estimated to cost the province about $11 million annually, was announced last year, Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara said it would save individuals hundreds of dollars, suggesting it could save up to $10,000 over a person's lifetime. "Costs should never be a barrier to you receiving the health care you need, and we all know that reproductive health care is health care," Asagwara said at an August news conference. Manitoba's latest budget, released Thursday, promises another $7 million to include copper IUDs and Plan B emergency contraceptives — sometimes called the "morning-after pill" — under the free birth control plan. Previously, only hormonal IUDs were covered. While pills are the most common contraceptive, Kemlin Nembhard, executive director at Women's Health Clinic in Winnipeg, says the clinic has noticed an increase in requests for IUDs — a small, T-shaped, intrauterine device that can protect against pregnancy for nearly a decade. "The hormonal IUD can provide protection for up to eight years, so that's eight years where you're not having to think every day, 'did I take my pill?'" said Nembhard, adding IUDs can offer discreet protection for people in abusive situations who may be at risk if pills are discovered. "It really does provide this level of autonomy for somebody that sometimes a pill does not." However, IUDs can cost up to $600, Nembhard says, making them more expensive upfront compared to $25 per month pills. "Now that we have this new program, it makes it more affordable for people to be able to do that," she said. The clinic had been calling for an expansion of the provincial program to include copper IUDs and Plan B since the plan was announced, and Nembhard says she's happy to see some gaps filled in this week's budget. "It's great that the Manitoba government is doing this. Even though there's things I wish they would add to it, hands down, it's great," she said. "This is what democracy is about." For decades, the Women's Health Clinic has offered free birth control to Winnipeggers and would like to see the government follow suit and add barrier methods like condoms, which also protect against sexually transmitted diseases, to its plan, said Nembhard. Despite some gaps, Haran Vijayanathan, the community health and wellness director at Klinic Community Health, said the program shows the NDP government is "taking steps in the right direction." "We're able to offer more informed conversations so people can make informed decisions about the health care that they are receiving, and the contraceptives that might work for them in their particular situation," Vijayanathan said, adding he'd like to see vulnerable populations who might not have access to health cards included in the plan in the future.

Women's Health Clinic services disrupted after bursting pipes, falling ceiling tiles and flooding
Women's Health Clinic services disrupted after bursting pipes, falling ceiling tiles and flooding

CBC

time21-02-2025

  • Health
  • CBC

Women's Health Clinic services disrupted after bursting pipes, falling ceiling tiles and flooding

Social Sharing Services at the Women's Health Clinic have been disrupted for the second time in less than a year as infrastructure problems in the aging downtown building resurface the need for committed provincial funding that has yet to be delivered to retrofit the site. The centre's executive director, Kemlin Nembhard, told CBC News appointments had been rearranged outside of the clinic located on Graham Avenue since Tuesday after heating problems, bursting pipes and falling ceiling tiles. The drawbacks began after the Louis Riel Day long weekend, when staff returned to the downtown Winnipeg clinic and found the boiler had stopped working, plunging the temperature inside the centre close to 1 C, Nembhard said. Without the heat and frigid temperatures that hovered below –20 C during the weekend, Nembhard said pipes on the first floor froze. The added pressure from the frozen water, combined with the change in temperature after the boiler was repaired, led some pipes to burst. "When we came in on Wednesday, our first floor was flooded," Nembhard said. Water could still be heard running through the building by Thursday, with some leaks and a plume of steam billowing inside the clinic. The stability of the ceiling has also been compromised, with some tiles falling to the ground, including one that came down beside Nembhard while she was doing an interview with CBC News on Thursday. The downtown community health centre has been rearranging appointments to phone calls and virtual assessments or moving them to another location altogether since Tuesday. Walk-in services, including pregnancy tests and birth control, can still be picked up on-site if patients call ahead. Nembhard expects the clinic to continue redirecting its services until Monday at least. Retrofitting is 'critically important' The downtown establishment, now only operated by the clinic, was built in the 1960s, but it wasn't designed to house a health-care facility. "As we've grown, that's become more evident," Nembhard said, and so has the need to remodel the building, most importantly because systems inside the facility are aging. The elevator and boiler, for example, were manufactured around the same time the building was constructed. Some of their parts are no longer manufactured, making repairs challenging. "We've known for a long time that we needed to redevelop the building," Nembhard said. "It is critically important." Many of the services provided at the clinic are for patients who are already often marginalized in the healthcare system. Nembhard said the clinic also offers services that are difficult to access in other places, outside of the private sector. The clinic is also one of the largest abortion providers in Manitoba and runs one of two publicly-funded eating disorder recovery programs. Since Nembhard started working at the clinic four and half years ago, there has been a capital funding campaign to redevelop the clinic. Renderings and schematics with the vision of the remodelled facility have been created, and the clinic has been in conversations to get funding for the project, including with the federal government and the province. During the last provincial election campaign, the NDP committed in a social media video to providing "full capital funding" to retrofit the building. After forming government, Premier Wab Kinew directed Health Minister Uzoma Asagwara in an October mandate letter to fund "critical renovations" at the clinic. Last summer, when clinic operations were disrupted after damage to the air conditioner system led to weeks of sweltering heat inside the centre, Minister of Health Uzoma Asagwara said help was on the way. But so far, more than a year after forming a government, the NDP has not allocated any direct funding to the project. Province meeting clinic, feds for funding Asagwara said a second disruption to the clinic in less than a year due to infrastructure issues is unacceptable, and their government has been meeting regularly with the clinic and the federal government to ensure the funding comes. But "we're talking about a capital project that would essentially replace that infrastructure almost entirely … that is a massive project that requires multiple partners to ensure that that gets done well and, and done correctly," Asagwara said in an interview with CBC on Thursday. The clinic has previously estimated the price range for the renovation to hover around $20 million. "An investment like that is important, and we support it," Asagwara said. "This is an invaluable health-care service." In the meantime, the province has also taken steps to support the clinic as it faces current infrastructure challenges, including working with Shared Health to provide heaters and generators after the boiler went out of service. Asagwara said the government has also been in conversations with the clinic to help strengthen services at the facility and make sure capacity is added to meet the needs of the province. The clinic has engaged in conversations to bring in the private sector, but public dollars are needed first, Nembhard said, as other partners want to know what the government is committing before funding the project. Nembhard said they are engaging in conversations with the province as remodelling the site is a priority. "How important do you think it is that women, people who are gender diverse … access to this care is like good quality care?" Nembhard said.

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