PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Michael S. Taglione AU - Haroon Ahmad AU - Morgan Slater AU - Babak Aliarzadeh AU - Richard H. Glazier AU - Andreas Laupacis AU - Nav Persaud TI - Development of a preliminary essential medicines list for Canada AID - 10.9778/cmajo.20160122 DP - 2017 Feb 16 TA - CMAJ Open PG - E137--E143 VI - 5 IP - 1 4099 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/5/1/E137.short 4100 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/5/1/E137.full AB - Background: Some evidence supports the use of a short list of essential medicines to improve prescribing. We aimed to create a preliminary essential medicines list for use in Canada.Methods: The 2013 World Health Organization Model List of Essential Medicines was initially adapted by the research team. Fourteen Canadian clinicians gave suggestions for changes to the list. Literature relevant to each unique suggestion was gathered and presented to 3 clinician-scientists who used a modified nominal group technique to make recommendations on the suggested changes. Audits of prescriptions of 2 Toronto-based family health teams (an inner city clinic and a suburban site) between Aug. 1, 2013, and July 30, 2014, were performed to identify common prescriptions that were not on the draft list. Literature relevant to these additional medications was gathered and shared with the clinician-scientist review panel to determine whether each should be added to the list, and a list was developed. The audits were repeated based on the final list to provide a preliminary assessment of the coverage of the list.Results: The multistep process produced a list of 125 medications. The medications included on this list covered 90.8% and 92.6% of prescriptions at the inner city clinic and the suburban site, respectively. In total, 93% of the patients seen at the inner city clinic and 96% of the patients seen at the suburban clinic had all or all but 1 of their medications covered by the list.Interpretation: A preliminary list of essential medicines was developed that covered most, but not all, prescriptions at 2 primary care sites. The list should be further refined based on wider input.