Skip to content

Alberta strikes deal to off-load remaining batch of controversial children's medicine

The medication has proven to be problematic for Premier Danielle Smith's government after it struck a deal for the medicine three years ago to fill a gap during the COVID-19 pandemic.
87bec0d6e985df2b44a340f038e1c4913a1e41b9acbbe62c7946821098049d16
The Alberta Legislature is seen in Edmonton on Thursday, Oct. 31, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

EDMONTON — The Alberta government has reached a deal to off-load what remains of its controversial stockpile of unused children's pain and fever medicine.

Kristi Bland, with Alberta Health Services, says they are donating the medicine to the charity group Health Partners International of Canada.

Bland says shipments have begun and more are expected in the coming months.

Jackie Cousins, president of Health Partners, says they work with partners to ship medicine where it is needed, and confirms some of the Alberta medicine will go to war-torn Ukraine.

The medication has proven to be problematic for Premier Danielle Smith's government after it struck a deal for the medicine three years ago to fill a gap during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Alberta paid $70 million to a private provider for the medicine but has since sat on 1.4 million bottles after front-line health staff reported problems with it, including how the medicine’s thicker consistency risked clogging feeding tubes.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 27, 2025.

Aaron Sousa, The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks