The first part of that is a real focus on patients having access to their own health data. We have custodial data systems where we care more about whether or not the custodian of the data—not the person who actually owns and uses the data—has access to information in the way that they actually utilize care.
The second thing is the secondary effects you're going to see with things like pan-Canadian licensure. In Alberta, a lot of our patients migrate between B.C. and the Yukon. In the Yukon, they love having locums from Alberta because they have access to Connect Care, which means that all the patients who come through there now can have their information shared with local providers because they now have someone in the group who can actually access this information.
I think focusing on the way that patients migrate between systems and the ways that providers migrate and where they provide care is going to be really important as far as how we track.