The best example I can give you, as I alluded to in my presentation, is the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, where we appreciate so much the work of Health Canada in working with nurses at CNA and with others to expand that provision so that nurse practitioners could prescribe narcotics, opioid-based narcotics, and drugs used in mental health, such as benzodiazepines.
However, that work stops short of brokering a collaboration across the country whereby those changes could be more immediately implemented into practice. What is happening as we speak is that approximately half the country has now reached the ability, under provincial or territorial legislation, to enact those provisions. The other half of the country is still working to do that.
So here the federal government did a great job, and we had what we needed, but it's very slow to be taken up. If there were such a table as a federal-provincial-territorial table that looked at harmonizing those at the point of brokering them, we believe there would be more immediate uptake.