Prescription birth control will soon be free in B.C. Here's what you need to know - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, December 29, 2024, 08:24 AM | Calgary | -8.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Prescription birth control will soon be free in B.C. Here's what you need to know

British Columbia is soon to become the first jurisdiction in Canada to make prescription birth control free to its residents. Here's what you need to know from what's covered to who's covered.

Birth control will still not be available over the counter

B.C. to make contraception free a first in Canada

2 years ago
Duration 1:52
On April 1, B.C. will become the first Canadian jurisdiction to make prescription contraception free for all residents, including oral pills, injections, IUDs and the morning-after pill Plan B. Some are hoping other provinces will follow suit.

British Columbia is soon to become the first jurisdiction in Canada to make prescription birth control free to its residents.

Here's what you need to know from what's covered to who's covered.

What will be covered?

Starting April 1, the province said it will cover the following prescription contraceptives:

  • Oral hormone pills, commonly known as the pill.
  • Subdermal(under-the-skin)injections and implants.
  • Copper and hormonal intrauterine devices, also known as IUDs.
  • Plan B, also known as the morning-after pill.

Free prescription contraception will also be made available to men, including trans men.

Vasectomies have already been covered for years by B.C. MSP, or the Medical Services Plan.

What is not covered?

Condoms are available over the counter and were not included in the list of covered products.

Birth control will still not be available over the counter.

The Ministry of Health may eventually look at covering other contraceptive products, like vaginal rings and transdermal patchesin the future, but as of now, they are not covered.

WATCH |Period Poverty Task Force's Nikki Hill discusses the impact of free contraceptives:

B.C. government to fund contraception

2 years ago
Duration 0:25
The B.C. government's budget is promising MSP coverage for prescription contraception. The co-chair of B.C.s Period Poverty Task Force, Nikki Hill, says the move will help those facing poverty.

How do I access free contraception?

The province said residents covered by MSPwill initially need to take aprescription from a family doctor to a pharmacist to have the prescription filled starting in April.

As early as May, residents will be able to skip the family doctor step: they should be able to get a prescription straight from apharmacist once their scope of practice expands.

Can I get reimbursed for birth control I've already paid for?

No. According to the Ministry of Finance, this newpolicy is not retroactive and will only apply to prescriptions filled after April 1, 2023.

Is it restricted by age?

No,but you must be a resident covered by MSP meaning Canadians from other provinces or territories cannot travel to B.C. to access free contraception.

Why is the province doing this?

The province said it's offeringfree contraception to make sure that money isn't a barrier for women, transgender and non-binary people to makechoices about their own sexual and reproductive health.

The budget said the move will not only help prevent unplanned pregnancies and improve health outcomes forparentsand babies but could also help patients manage chronic conditions like endometriosisorpolycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).

A minister stands in the caucus as colleagues applaud.
B.C. Finance Minister Katrine Conroy tables her first budget in the legislative assembly at the legislature in Victoria on Tuesday. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

How much money will this cost the government?

The province is spending $119 million over three years for the new program.

It said the initiativecould save someone who spends $25 on the pill every month up to$10,000 over their lifetime.

In British Columbia,the pill can cost at least $240 a year,hormone injections can cost as much as $180 per yearand longer-lasting IUDs anywhere from$75 and $500.

The pill continues to be one of the most common methods of birth control.

More than 48 per cent of sexually active 15- to 24-year-olds reported that they or their partner were using the pill the last time they had sex, according to a Statistics Canada study published in 2020.

Long-acting methods like IUDs or hormonal implants became more popular as respondents got older.

The agency said one in 10sexually active females between 15 and24 reported having usedemergency contraception, like the morning-after pill, in the previous year.

How willB.C. measure up against other places in terms of access?

Access to birth control varies widely around the world.

British Columbia's decision comes in stark contrastto the ongoing debate around reproductive rights in the United States since the overturning of Roe v. Wade paved the way for states totighten their regulation of contraceptives and access to abortion.

Abroad,birth control options should beavailable over-the-counter at local pharmacies and in grocery stores in countries including China, Greece, India, Turkey, Mexico, South Africa, Russiaand Korea.

Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the Scandinavian countriesprovide free contraception. In France, residents aged 25 and over can get reimbursed.

The Access B.C. campaign, whichpushed for free contraception in the province for six years, sees B.C.'s decision as a potential spark for change elsewhere in Canada.

"This is a big policy,"said chairDr. Teale Phelps Bondaroff, who isleading similar campaigns in Ontario, Manitoba, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia."It's going to transform reproductive health in the province, and my hope is that this makes British Columbia a beacon of hope for reproductive justice across Canada and further afield."

He noted cost is only one barrier to contraceptive access,and other factors like geography, education and physician bias still need to be addressed.

"There's lots of more work to be done," Phelps Bondaroffsaid.

With files from Curt Petrovich, Chad Pawson and The Canadian Press