A Toronto doctor wants to know why Ontario family physicians have no easy way to check how much a medication will cost their patients before they prescribe them.

Dr. Iris Gorfinkel told CTVā€™s Your Morning that the impact of doctors not knowing drug costs is ā€œmassive.ā€ She says, when patients donā€™t realize they canā€™t afford their meds until they are at the pharmacy counter, they often choose to simply not take the meds -- sometimes with devastating effects.

Dr. Gorfinkel says she recently had one patient who wasnā€™t old enough to qualify for the Ontario Drug Benefit, but needed to take a variety of medications after a heart attack. The cost of the drugs totalled more than $400 a month.

When the patient had another heart attack just a few months later, Gorfinkel learned she wasnā€™t taking her medications because she couldnā€™t afford them. She also later learned that she had prescribed the patient a drug that cost $170 for a three-month supply, when a generic alternative existed for $35. But Gorfinkel didnā€™t know.

Thatā€™s why she would like to see the Ontario government change the system so that the cost of a medication is automatically included in a patientā€™s electronic medical records. That way, when doctors prescribe a drug, they know right away whether the patient will be able to afford it.

As it is currently, family doctors can use databases to look up a drugā€™s price. But the process is time-consuming and, with most appointments lasting only minutes, Gorfinkel says she would rather spend her time attending to her patientsā€™ needs.

She says the system needs to be simpler so that she can know right away if a drug is too expensive and whether it would be better to prescribe a generic drug, or go with a less-expensive alternative.

Gorfinkel notes this is an issue that doesnā€™t just affect those on low or fixed incomes.

ā€œEven when patients can afford a drug, I would argue they have the right to know what options there are,ā€ she said.

The Ontario Medical Association backs Gorfinkelā€™s proposal to add drug costs to a patientā€™s electronic medical record. So do the Nurse Practitionersā€™ Association of Ontario and the Ontario Pharmacists Association.

Dr. Gorfinkel has been calling for change for months and has met with Ministry of Health officials to discuss her proposal. A press secretary for the ministry says they are ā€œconsidering next steps.ā€

But Gorfinkel is puzzled as to why change is taking so long.

ā€œItā€™s interesting because everyone is on board with the idea. Everybody readily acknowledges the importance of this. And yet thereā€™s an inertia to change,ā€ she said.

She says her idea is simple and would cost ā€œvery littleā€ to institute.

ā€œWhatā€™s holding it up is one thing: ā€˜Thatā€™s the way weā€™ve always done things.ā€™ And thatā€™s a poor excuse,ā€ she said.