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Health Canada

Health Canada (HC; French: Santé Canada, SC)[NB 1] is the department of the Government of Canada responsible for national health policy. The department itself is also responsible for numerous federal health-related agencies, including the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) and the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), among others. These organizations help to ensure compliance with federal law in a variety of healthcare, agricultural, and pharmaceutical activities. This responsibility also involves extensive collaboration with various other federal- and provincial-level organizations in order to ensure the safety of food, health, and pharmaceutical products—including the regulation of health research and pharmaceutical manufacturing/testing facilities.

Health Canada
Santé Canada
Department overview
TypeDepartment responsible for federal health policy in Canada
JurisdictionCanada
Employees11,223 (March 2020)[1]
Annual budget$3.9 billion (2021–22)[2]
Ministers responsible
Department executives
  • Dr. Stephen Lucas, Deputy Minister
  • Heather Jeffrey, Associate Deputy Minister
Websitewww.hc-sc.gc.ca

The department is responsible to Parliament through the minister of health—presently Jean-Yves Duclos—as part of the federal health portfolio.[3] The minister is assisted by the associate minister of health, and minister of mental health and addictions—presently Carolyn Bennett. The deputy minister of health, the senior most civil servant within the department, is responsible for the day-to-day leadership and operations of the department and reports directly to the minister.

Originally created as the "Department of Health" in 1919—in the wake of the Spanish flu crisis[4]—what is known as Health Canada today was formed in 1993 from the former Health and Welfare Canada department (established in 1944), which split into two separate units; the other department being Human Resources and Labour Canada.[5]

Organization

Health Canada's leadership consists of:[6]

Branches

The following branches, offices, and bureaus (and their respective services) fall under the jurisdiction of Health Canada:[6]

  • Health Canada
    • Office of Audit and Evaluation
      • Departmental Audit Committee
      • Director General / Chief Audit Executive's Office
      • Internal Audit and Special Examinations
      • Program Evaluation Division
      • Performance Measurement Planning and Integration
      • Practice Management
    • Chief Financial Officer Branch
      • Departmental Performance Measurement and Evaluation Directorate
      • Departmental Resource Management Directorate
      • Financial Operations Directorate
      • Internal Control Division
      • Materiel and Assets Management Directorate
      • Planning and Corporate Management Practices Directorate
    • Communications and Public Affairs Branch
      • Ethics and Internal Ombudsman Services
      • Marketing and Communications Services Directorate
      • Planning and Operations Division
      • Public Affairs and Strategic Communications Directorate
      • Stakeholder Relations and Consultation Directorate
    • Controlled Substances and Cannabis Branch
    • Corporate Services Branch
    • Departmental Secretariat
    • Health Products and Food Branch
    • Healthy Environments and Consumer Safety Branch
      • Consumer and Hazardous Products Safety Directorate
      • Environmental and Radiation Health Sciences Directorate
      • Policy Planning and Integration Directorate
      • Safe Environments Directorate
        • Climate Change and Innovation Bureau
        • Water and Air Quality Bureau
        • New Substances Assessment and Control Bureau
        • Existing Substances Risk Assessment Bureau
    • Legal Services
    • Opioid Response Team
      • Controlled Substances Directorate
      • Opioid Response Team Directorate
    • Pest Management Regulatory Agency
    • Regulatory Operations and Enforcement Branch
    • Strategic Policy Branch

Partner agencies

In their responsible of maintaining and improving the health of Canadians, the Minister of Health is supported by the Health Portfolio, which comprises Health Canada as well as:

Additionally, Health Canada is a corporate partner of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP).[7]

International collaboration

In December 2016, Health Canada approved the purchase of a new botulism antitoxin called heptavalent botulism antitoxin (BAT) from the American-based company Emergent Biosolutions, a global specialty biopharmaceutical company. The PHAC has identified botulism as a likely biological terrorist threat.[8]

Labs and offices

Offices

  • Office of the Cameron Visiting Chair
  • Office of the Chief Dental Officer
  • The National Office of WHMIS
  • Nurse Recruitment
  • Public Services Health Medical Centre

Laboratories

  • Laboratory Centre for Disease Control
  • Sir Frederick G Banting Research Centre

Compliance and Enforcement Directorate

The Compliance and Enforcement Directorate provides support to Health Canada by enforcing the laws and regulations pertaining to the production, distribution, importation, sale, and/or use of consumer products, including but not limited to: tobacco, pest control materials, drugs and medical devices, biologics, and natural health products.

The Directorate conducts inspections and investigations to ensure that products are safe, of good quality, and properly labelled and distributed, in order to better protect Canadians from potentially harmful products and consumables.

Compliance and Enforcement Directorate is divided into six distinct programs:[9]

  • Canada Vigilance Program
  • Controlled Substances Program
  • Inspectorate Program
  • Pesticide Compliance Program
  • Product Safety Program
  • Tobacco Control Program

Related legislation

Acts for which Health Canada has total or partial responsibility:[10]

Acts which Health Canada is involved or has special interest in:

Special access program

Health Canada has a special access program that health care providers may use to request medications that are not currently commercially available in Canada.[11]

COVID-19 response

The chief medical advisor of Health Canada, Dr. Supriya Sharma,[12][13] as of April 2021, oversees the COVID-19 vaccine approval process in Canada.[12][14] On 29 March 2021, Dr. Sharma supported the National Advisory Committee on Immunization's declaration of a pause for the administration of the AstraZeneca vaccine to Canadians under the age of 55.[13][15]

Criticisms

An editorial published by the Canadian Medical Association Journal has called for Health Canada to more strictly regulate natural health products. The editorial cited weaknesses in current legislation that allow natural health products to make baseless health claims, to neglect side-effects research prior to products reaching market, and to be sold without being evaluated by Health Canada.[16]

On 10 September 2012, a report on CBC Television questioned the safety of drugs sold in North America.[17] The Canadian Press reported that Health Canada is secretive regarding inspections about drugs manufactured overseas, leaving the public unsure about the safety of these drugs.[18]

Drug approvals process

Health Canada aims to provide responses to pharmaceutical innovators within 300 days of submitting a drug for review. However, for submissions filed between 2015 and 2019, only 33 percent received a response within that target. Fully 18 percent waited over a year, and almost 5 percent over two years. The average delay for a standard review was 335 days. Health Canada's accelerated pathway for approval dubbed "conditional compliance" reduces its target timeline to 200 days, but its actual average delay was still 302 days, and only 8 percent of applicants received responses within the 200-day target.[19]

It has been suggested that government entities should make use of rolling submissions, as was done for COVID-19 vaccines, to proceed with the examination of partially complete submissions and accept new information as it becomes available, and also that drugs already approved in other jurisdictions should be approved more rapidly to avoid redundancy.[19]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Health Canada is the applied title under the Federal Identity Program; the legal title is Department of Health (French: Ministère de la Santé).

References

  1. ^ "GC InfoBase". www.tbs-sct.gc.ca. Retrieved Mar 5, 2021.
  2. ^ "GC InfoBase". www.tbs-sct.gc.ca. Retrieved April 15, 2021.
  3. ^ "Health Portfolio". Canada.ca. Government of Canada (2017). Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Influenza, 1918-1919 | Canada and the First World War". Canadian War Museum. Canadian Heritage. 2017 [2008]. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  5. ^ Cheung-gertler, Jasmin H. (2014) [2008]. "Health Canada". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Historica Canada. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  6. ^ a b "Health Canada's organizational structure". Health Canada. Government of Canada. 15 April 2020. from the original on 2010-10-16. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  7. ^ "Annual Report 2018-2019" (PDF). Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians. 2019. (PDF) from the original on 2022-04-20. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  8. ^ "Emergent BioSolutions Receives Health Canada Approval for Botulism Antitoxin". Yahoo Finance. 2016-12-12. from the original on 2017-01-13. Retrieved 2017-01-11.
  9. ^ . Health Canada. Archived from the original on 2013-10-29.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-05-19. Retrieved 2007-04-15.
  11. ^ Canada, Health (23 December 2002). "Health Canada's special access programs: Request a drug". www.canada.ca. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  12. ^ a b Rabson, Mia (March 28, 2021). "'Unprecedented': How Canada approved five vaccines for COVID-19 in under a year". The Canadian Press. The National Post. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  13. ^ a b Cochrane, David; Tasker, John Paul (29 March 2021). "Immunization committee to recommend provinces stop giving AstraZeneca vaccine to those under 55: sources". CBC.
  14. ^ Ritchot, Mélanie (23 December 2020). "Nunavut to get 6,000 doses of Moderna vaccine in first shipment". Nortext Publishing Corporation (Iqaluit). Nunavut News.
  15. ^ Gillies, Rob (29 March 2021). "Canada pauses AstraZeneca vaccine for under 55". Chicago Daily Herald. Associated Press.
  16. ^ Gauntlet Editorial Board. "Editorial: Mis-informed consent". Editorial. The Gauntlet. from the original on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 18 December 2011.
  17. ^ "Drug safety expert questions medications made overseas". 10 September 2012. from the original on 2013-03-29. Retrieved 2012-09-11.
  18. ^ Bains, Camille (10 September 2012). "Health Canada mum on plant inspections: researcher". via BC - CTV News.ca. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  19. ^ a b Post, Special to Financial (2021-06-16). "Opinion: Let's have permanently quicker drug approvals". Financial Post. Retrieved 2021-10-18.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Health Canada's channel on YouTube

health, canada, confused, with, public, health, agency, canada, agency, federal, government, responsible, public, health, french, santé, canada, department, government, canada, responsible, national, health, policy, department, itself, also, responsible, numer. Not to be confused with The Public Health Agency of Canada the agency of the federal government responsible for public health Health Canada HC French Sante Canada SC NB 1 is the department of the Government of Canada responsible for national health policy The department itself is also responsible for numerous federal health related agencies including the Canadian Food Inspection Agency CFIA and the Public Health Agency of Canada PHAC among others These organizations help to ensure compliance with federal law in a variety of healthcare agricultural and pharmaceutical activities This responsibility also involves extensive collaboration with various other federal and provincial level organizations in order to ensure the safety of food health and pharmaceutical products including the regulation of health research and pharmaceutical manufacturing testing facilities Health CanadaSante CanadaDepartment overviewTypeDepartment responsible for federal health policy in CanadaJurisdictionCanadaEmployees11 223 March 2020 1 Annual budget 3 9 billion 2021 22 2 Ministers responsibleHon Jean Yves Duclos Minister of HealthHon Dr Carolyn Bennett Associate Minister of Health and Minister of Mental Health and AddictionsDepartment executivesDr Stephen Lucas Deputy MinisterHeather Jeffrey Associate Deputy MinisterWebsitewww wbr hc sc wbr gc wbr caThe department is responsible to Parliament through the minister of health presently Jean Yves Duclos as part of the federal health portfolio 3 The minister is assisted by the associate minister of health and minister of mental health and addictions presently Carolyn Bennett The deputy minister of health the senior most civil servant within the department is responsible for the day to day leadership and operations of the department and reports directly to the minister Originally created as the Department of Health in 1919 in the wake of the Spanish flu crisis 4 what is known as Health Canada today was formed in 1993 from the former Health and Welfare Canada department established in 1944 which split into two separate units the other department being Human Resources and Labour Canada 5 Contents 1 Organization 1 1 Branches 1 2 Partner agencies 1 2 1 International collaboration 2 Labs and offices 2 1 Offices 2 2 Laboratories 3 Compliance and Enforcement Directorate 4 Related legislation 5 Special access program 6 COVID 19 response 7 Criticisms 8 Drug approvals process 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksOrganization EditHealth Canada s leadership consists of 6 Minister of Health Deputy Minister Associate Deputy MinisterBranches EditThe following branches offices and bureaus and their respective services fall under the jurisdiction of Health Canada 6 Health Canada Office of Audit and Evaluation Departmental Audit Committee Director General Chief Audit Executive s Office Internal Audit and Special Examinations Program Evaluation Division Performance Measurement Planning and Integration Practice Management Chief Financial Officer Branch Departmental Performance Measurement and Evaluation Directorate Departmental Resource Management Directorate Financial Operations Directorate Internal Control Division Materiel and Assets Management Directorate Planning and Corporate Management Practices Directorate Communications and Public Affairs Branch Ethics and Internal Ombudsman Services Marketing and Communications Services Directorate Planning and Operations Division Public Affairs and Strategic Communications Directorate Stakeholder Relations and Consultation Directorate Controlled Substances and Cannabis Branch Corporate Services Branch Departmental Secretariat Health Products and Food Branch Assistant Deputy Minister s Office Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate Food Directorate Marketed Health Products Directorate Medical Devices Directorate Natural and Non prescription Health Products Directorate Office of Nutrition Policy and Promotion Policy Planning and International Affairs Directorate Resource Management and Operations Directorate Therapeutic Products Directorate Veterinary Drugs Directorate Healthy Environments and Consumer Safety Branch Consumer and Hazardous Products Safety Directorate Environmental and Radiation Health Sciences Directorate Policy Planning and Integration Directorate Safe Environments Directorate Climate Change and Innovation Bureau Water and Air Quality Bureau New Substances Assessment and Control Bureau Existing Substances Risk Assessment Bureau Legal Services Opioid Response Team Controlled Substances Directorate Opioid Response Team Directorate Pest Management Regulatory Agency Regulatory Operations and Enforcement Branch Strategic Policy Branch Partner agencies Edit In their responsible of maintaining and improving the health of Canadians the Minister of Health is supported by the Health Portfolio which comprises Health Canada as well as Public Health Agency of Canada Canadian Institutes of Health Research the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board and the Canadian Food Inspection AgencyAdditionally Health Canada is a corporate partner of the Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians CAEP 7 International collaboration Edit In December 2016 Health Canada approved the purchase of a new botulism antitoxin called heptavalent botulism antitoxin BAT from the American based company Emergent Biosolutions a global specialty biopharmaceutical company The PHAC has identified botulism as a likely biological terrorist threat 8 Labs and offices EditOffices Edit Office of the Cameron Visiting Chair Office of the Chief Dental Officer The National Office of WHMIS Nurse Recruitment Public Services Health Medical CentreLaboratories Edit Laboratory Centre for Disease Control Sir Frederick G Banting Research CentreCompliance and Enforcement Directorate EditThe Compliance and Enforcement Directorate provides support to Health Canada by enforcing the laws and regulations pertaining to the production distribution importation sale and or use of consumer products including but not limited to tobacco pest control materials drugs and medical devices biologics and natural health products The Directorate conducts inspections and investigations to ensure that products are safe of good quality and properly labelled and distributed in order to better protect Canadians from potentially harmful products and consumables Compliance and Enforcement Directorate is divided into six distinct programs 9 Canada Vigilance Program Controlled Substances Program Inspectorate Program Pesticide Compliance Program Product Safety Program Tobacco Control ProgramRelated legislation EditActs for which Health Canada has total or partial responsibility 10 Assisted Human Reproduction Act Canada Health Act Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse Act Canadian Environmental Protection Act Canadian Institutes of Health Research Act Cannabis Act Controlled Drugs and Substances Act Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Implementation Act Department of Health Act Financial Administration Act Fitness and Amateur Sport Act Food and Drugs Act Hazardous Materials Information Review Act Hazardous Products Act Patent Act Pest Control Products Act Pesticide Residue Compensation Act Quarantine Act Radiation Emitting Devices Act Tobacco Act amp Act to Amend the Tobacco Act sponsorship Acts which Health Canada is involved or has special interest in Broadcasting Act Canada Labour Code Canada Medical Act Canada Shipping Act Canadian Food Inspection Agency Act Emergency Preparedness Act Energy Supplies Emergency Act Excise Tax Act Federal Provincial Fiscal Arrangements Act Feeds Act Immigration and Refugee Protection Act National Parks Act Nuclear Safety and Control Act Non Smokers Health Act Queen Elizabeth II Canadian Research Fund Act Trade Marks ActSpecial access program EditHealth Canada has a special access program that health care providers may use to request medications that are not currently commercially available in Canada 11 COVID 19 response EditThe chief medical advisor of Health Canada Dr Supriya Sharma 12 13 as of April 2021 oversees the COVID 19 vaccine approval process in Canada 12 14 On 29 March 2021 Dr Sharma supported the National Advisory Committee on Immunization s declaration of a pause for the administration of the AstraZeneca vaccine to Canadians under the age of 55 13 15 Criticisms EditAn editorial published by the Canadian Medical Association Journal has called for Health Canada to more strictly regulate natural health products The editorial cited weaknesses in current legislation that allow natural health products to make baseless health claims to neglect side effects research prior to products reaching market and to be sold without being evaluated by Health Canada 16 On 10 September 2012 a report on CBC Television questioned the safety of drugs sold in North America 17 The Canadian Press reported that Health Canada is secretive regarding inspections about drugs manufactured overseas leaving the public unsure about the safety of these drugs 18 Drug approvals process EditHealth Canada aims to provide responses to pharmaceutical innovators within 300 days of submitting a drug for review However for submissions filed between 2015 and 2019 only 33 percent received a response within that target Fully 18 percent waited over a year and almost 5 percent over two years The average delay for a standard review was 335 days Health Canada s accelerated pathway for approval dubbed conditional compliance reduces its target timeline to 200 days but its actual average delay was still 302 days and only 8 percent of applicants received responses within the 200 day target 19 It has been suggested that government entities should make use of rolling submissions as was done for COVID 19 vaccines to proceed with the examination of partially complete submissions and accept new information as it becomes available and also that drugs already approved in other jurisdictions should be approved more rapidly to avoid redundancy 19 See also EditHealth care in Canada Public Health Agency of Canada First Nations Health Authority U S Department of Health and Human Services HHS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC Food and Drug Administration FDA European Medicines Agency EMA Japanese Ministry of Health Labour and Welfare MHLW National Centre for Disease Control NCDC Notes Edit Health Canada is the applied title under the Federal Identity Program the legal title is Department of Health French Ministere de la Sante References Edit GC InfoBase www tbs sct gc ca Retrieved Mar 5 2021 GC InfoBase www tbs sct gc ca Retrieved April 15 2021 Health Portfolio Canada ca Government of Canada 2017 Retrieved 29 April 2020 Influenza 1918 1919 Canada and the First World War Canadian War Museum Canadian Heritage 2017 2008 Retrieved 29 April 2020 Cheung gertler Jasmin H 2014 2008 Health Canada The Canadian Encyclopedia Historica Canada Retrieved 29 April 2020 a b Health Canada s organizational structure Health Canada Government of Canada 15 April 2020 Archived from the original on 2010 10 16 Retrieved 29 April 2020 Annual Report 2018 2019 PDF Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2019 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 04 20 Retrieved 2022 06 18 Emergent BioSolutions Receives Health Canada Approval for Botulism Antitoxin Yahoo Finance 2016 12 12 Archived from the original on 2017 01 13 Retrieved 2017 01 11 About Health Canada Ontario Region Compliance and Enforcement Health Canada Archived from the original on 2013 10 29 About Health Canada Legislation amp Guidelines Acts Archived from the original on 2007 05 19 Retrieved 2007 04 15 Canada Health 23 December 2002 Health Canada s special access programs Request a drug www canada ca Retrieved 13 September 2021 a b Rabson Mia March 28 2021 Unprecedented How Canada approved five vaccines for COVID 19 in under a year The Canadian Press The National Post Retrieved 28 April 2021 a b Cochrane David Tasker John Paul 29 March 2021 Immunization committee to recommend provinces stop giving AstraZeneca vaccine to those under 55 sources CBC Ritchot Melanie 23 December 2020 Nunavut to get 6 000 doses of Moderna vaccine in first shipment Nortext Publishing Corporation Iqaluit Nunavut News Gillies Rob 29 March 2021 Canada pauses AstraZeneca vaccine for under 55 Chicago Daily Herald Associated Press Gauntlet Editorial Board Editorial Mis informed consent Editorial The Gauntlet Archived from the original on 7 March 2012 Retrieved 18 December 2011 Drug safety expert questions medications made overseas 10 September 2012 Archived from the original on 2013 03 29 Retrieved 2012 09 11 Bains Camille 10 September 2012 Health Canada mum on plant inspections researcher via BC CTV News ca The Canadian Press Retrieved 24 July 2022 a b Post Special to Financial 2021 06 16 Opinion Let s have permanently quicker drug approvals Financial Post Retrieved 2021 10 18 External links EditOfficial website Health Canada s channel on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Health Canada amp oldid 1152306205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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