Manitoba to offer free, no-deductible coverage for drugs that help prevent, treat HIV - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba to offer free, no-deductible coverage for drugs that help prevent, treat HIV

Some Manitobans will save upwards ofa few hundred dollars a month after the province announced it would fully cover the cost of a drug thatsignificantly reduces the risk of contracting HIV.

Preventive drug PrEP has been covered under Pharmacare, but users still had to pay deductible

A man's tattooed arm is extended in front of green grass. Blue pills rest on the hand.
Taking PrEP medication reduces the risk of getting HIV through sexual contact by 99 per cent, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The province of Manitoba says it will cover the cost of PrEP for people who don't already have full coverage through their insurance. (Vanessa Blanch/CBC)

Some Manitobans will save upwards ofa few hundred dollars a month after the province announced it would fully cover the cost of a drug thatsignificantly reduces the risk of contracting HIV.

The province will offer pre-exposure prophylaxis, commonly known as PrEP,at no cost to any individuals who don't already have full coverage through their insurance, Health Minister Uzoma Asagwaraannounced at the legislatureThursday as part of aministerial statement on Pride Month.

Taking PrEP medicationreduces the risk of getting HIV through sexual contact by 99 per cent, according to the Centersfor Disease Control and Prevention in the U.S.

The health minister also indicatedManitoba will providefull coverage for PEP, or post-exposure prophylaxis, which is a drug for individualswho havepossibly been exposed to HIV, and ART, atreatment for HIV-positive people that reduces the levelof virus in a person's body, Asagwara said.

Full coverage of the drugs will start on Monday, the minister said.

In 2021, the former Progressive Conservative government added PrEPto the provincial drug formulary, but itwasn't fully covered as individuals still needed to pay their deductible, an amount based upon an individual'sincome level.

Thursday's announcement will remove the requirement fora Pharmacare deductible.

Costs upwards of $300 a month

Without coverage, PrEP canrunbetween $200 and $300 a month.Some anti-retroviral drugs used to treat HIV are coveredand cost over $1,000 a month.

Asagwarasaid Manitoba would also remove the requirement for health-care providers to register in order to prescribe PrEP.

"Folks who want to access PrEPcan get it from the care provider they feel most comfortable and safe with, exactly when they need it," Asagwara said.

Manitoba is removing barriers to accessHIV preventive medicine afterthe province reported its highest-ever number of HIV diagnoses in 2022.

The rate of new diagnoses has been "increasing dramatically" andmore than doubled over five years, according to the latest data from Manitoba Health for 2022.

A non-binary person in a burgundy suit and black shirt stands in the hallway, outside the front door of an office.
Uzoma Asagwara, Manitoba's health minister, announced the provincial government would cover the cost of three different HIV and AIDS medications. (Randall McKenzie/CBC)

There were 196 newly diagnosed cases that yeara 36 per cent increase from the 144 new cases in 2021. There were also 60 people living with HIV who moved to Manitoba, bringing the total to256, according to the program.

The demographics in Manitoba's HIV/AIDS cases differfrom other provinces, with higher rates of infection in heterosexual people, women and people who use injection drugs like methamphetamine,Manitoba HIV Program lead Kimberly Templetontold a news conference last year.

Elsewhere in Canada, HIV is more likely to impact gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men, she said.

Alberta,Saskatchewan and B.C. are among the provinces already covering the full price of PrEP.

Manitoba became the last in the country to cover at least some of the cost of PrEP when it wasadded to theprovincial drug formulary in 2021.

The province didn't provide a costestimate Thursday on extending full coverage to the three HIV and AIDS medications.

With files from Bryce Hoye