access to health care is an often-used phrase.
in some cases, it means a patient’s ability to receive primary care or a consultation from a specialist. in other instances, it may mean access to surgical care or critical pharmaceutical products, like vaccines or curative and life-extending treatments. a number of factors can affect one’s access to care. however, the barriers are particularly pronounced for canadian patients living with rare diseases.
rare diseases are often life-threatening
one in 12 canadians — about three million people — is living with a rare disease. two-thirds are children. there is no perfect definition that encompasses the more than 6,800 rare diseases, which include cystic fibrosis, multiple sclerosis and hemophilia. but rare diseases are often chronically debilitating or life-threatening. for many patients, access to care can be delayed or derailed by a variety of factors, including diagnostic delays, reimbursement challenges or the limited therapeutic options available. there are treatments for only about 10 per cent of rare diseases, and only 60 per cent of those treatments for rare diseases make it into canada.
even when treatments are available, access to the product varies greatly depending, in part, on where a patient lives, how the treatment is paid for and what type of coverage the patient and their families have.