I would agree. It's one of the most critical components to expanding capacity. We do need a significantly larger primary health care workforce, not just in order to tackle the pandemic but in order to catch up on the lost gains in routine immunization and to rebuild those highly disrupted health care systems. It will take both domestic investment of resources and better coordination and alignment by international donors as well.
In terms of the role of a government like Canada's, I think it's both: by investing in those delivery challenges and by leading by example and using your influence in fora like the G7, the G20 and the UN General Assembly to convey the message to other donor partners that coordination and a very clear focus on investing sustainably in the primary health care workforce is going to be one of the most important tools, not just in ending this pandemic but in preparing for the next one as well.