I will say to you what I have said elsewhere. Certainly for family medicine, in trying to increase the attraction of that discipline we have said, more or less they can do family practice, they can pursue areas of special interests, they can have flexibility in the profession. All this is true, except that now we need to deal with some of those consequences: that as a family physician, paid by society and being conferred that privilege by society, you have a responsibility to society.
For me as a family doctor, that's being able to see all men and women of any age, all presenting problems. By that I don't mean since you have chest pains, I'll send you to a cardiologist.
Provide superb follow-up, look after a defined population, and do so in more than one practice setting. That is a societal responsibility we have as family physicians, and that we need to promote. It's not a pick and choose. You can't break those five things. They are part of the core of this profession.