Vanessa’s Law makes it mandatory to share information on harmful side effects – but in three years of data reviewed by The Globe, hundreds of institutions reported no cases
Mr. Young’s advocacy as a private citizen and MP helped create the Protecting Canadians from Unsafe Drugs Act, or Vanessa’s Law, passed in 2014.
Spokesperson Lisa Cipriano said the Scarborough Health Network, which reported 37 incidents during the three-year period across eight sites, including three major urban hospitals, was also meeting its obligations.
He said UHN’s comparatively low numbers can be attributed to the network moving from a paper-based system that was less streamlined, the pressures of the pandemic, and the hospital’s interpretation of the law.
Anne Génier, senior media relations adviser at Health Canada, said in an e-mailed statement that, according to the law, hospitals must report all serious adverse drug reactions, including known effects and those that are unexpected.
However, after the implementation of the law, the department expected that hospitals would need time and resources to ramp up reporting, adding in an e-mailed statement that the pandemic could have played a role.
The two institutions with the most reports, CHU de Québec–Laval University and Vancouver General Hospital, have created more user-friendly systems separate from Health Canada’s mechanism to provide this data to the regulator.
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Mr. Young’s advocacy as a private citizen and MP helped create the Protecting Canadians from Unsafe Drugs Act, or Vanessa’s Law, passed in 2014.
Spokesperson Lisa Cipriano said the Scarborough Health Network, which reported 37 incidents during the three-year period across eight sites, including three major urban hospitals, was also meeting its obligations.
He said UHN’s comparatively low numbers can be attributed to the network moving from a paper-based system that was less streamlined, the pressures of the pandemic, and the hospital’s interpretation of the law.
Anne Génier, senior media relations adviser at Health Canada, said in an e-mailed statement that, according to the law, hospitals must report all serious adverse drug reactions, including known effects and those that are unexpected.
However, after the implementation of the law, the department expected that hospitals would need time and resources to ramp up reporting, adding in an e-mailed statement that the pandemic could have played a role.
The two institutions with the most reports, CHU de Québec–Laval University and Vancouver General Hospital, have created more user-friendly systems separate from Health Canada’s mechanism to provide this data to the regulator.
The original article contains 1,976 words, the summary contains 187 words. Saved 91%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!