When pharmacists fill a prescription, they charge what is known as a dispensing fee to cover costs of storing and preparing medication, as well as providing services to clients. These fees can vary from pharmacy to pharmacy, and can be a significant cost for patients. Manitoba Pharmacare 1 is also required to pay dispensing fees on prescriptions covered by the program.
Other provinces and territories across Canada have a cap on retail pharmacy dispensing fees. This ensures pharmacies are able to recover costs for providing services while reducing costs for patients and programs that are paying for prescriptions.
Effective August 18, Manitoba will be introducing a cap on dispensing fees. Pharmacies will be able to charge provincial drug programs up to $30 per prescription, regardless of the base cost of a drug or how a drug is packaged (such as in a pill bottle or blister pack).
In addition, pharmacies will be able to charge Pharmacare up to $30 for compounding services in a pharmacy (when medicinal ingredients are mixed and prepared to meet an individual patient's clinical needs).
In cases where drugs need to be compounded in sterile conditions, pharmacies will be able to charge Pharmacare up to $60. Additionally, Pharmacare will only consider a compounded drug an eligible benefit if the main ingredient in the preparation is a Pharmacare benefit.
These changes will help reduce costs for patients and the provincial drug plan, while ensuring pharmacists remain able to recover costs associated with dispensing drugs.
Questions and Answers
1 Provincial drug programs governed by The Prescription Drugs Cost Assistance Act (PDCAA) include Pharmacare, the Palliative Drug Access Program and the Home Cancer Drug Program. For simplicity we refer to all of these programs as “Pharmacare” or “provincial drug programs”. In general, amendments to the PDCAA do not apply to Employment Insurance and Assistance (EIA) drug program.
2 This does not apply to drugs and dispensing fees for drugs dispensed to Family services clients and through their drug program.