As I referred to in my opening remarks, we have this unfortunate anachronism where we have separate doctors for the mouth compared to the rest of the body, and that's reflected in all elements of training and service delivery. Canada is not the only country doing this, as I'm sure you're aware. It's the model pretty much everywhere in the world.
In my view, that's an unfortunate model, and we should be bringing oral health care professionals into the primary health care team on a very large scale. There's no difference between the causes of dental decay and the causes of many other chronic diseases. It's just about how they manifest. I think it's very relevant to have oral health care professionals in primary health care teams, and in a range of settings, as I said.
Getting back to issues around people with disabilities, clearly we need models where people who care for the mouths of those people go to them, because often they have great difficulty getting into private offices. They can also come to a local hospital or a local community health centre setting, and the oral health care professionals can go there. I think on many fronts, for people with complex diseases, young kids and many other people, going to the community health centre and getting oral health care there would be the best model.