Yes. I think I was influenced to some extent by the work that the physicians have done and are doing on their future of medical education in Canada project, their current work, which I believe they presented last week, in which they're looking at, I think, generalists, specialists, and specialization and linking that to human resources.
I see a real need for this in nursing, given what I've been discussing in terms of chronic illness, acute care, and the three categories of practical nurses, registered nurses, and nurse practitioners, a national look at harmonizing.... The outcome would be a harmonization of the education required to prepare practitioners in the future to meet the needs that we see linked to these changes that are coming down or growing in the next number of years. I don't know whether that is very clear. I'm using something of the processes that we have developed in involving all kinds of stakeholders, employers, regulatory bodies, and educators across the country to build this framework.
Then again, we did this with nurse practitioner education, and I think it has an influence. It has no clout legally, but it has influence nationally.
Would you agree?