In terms of innovation, I've been on the health portfolio for about six or seven years, provincially and now federally. I have seen a lot of changes in the provincial jurisdiction, a shifting to focus more on areas of better integration and prevention. I've always stated that equally important to treating people when they get ill is preventing them from getting ill in the first place.
When you consider the health indicators of the Canadian population, you will note very quickly that many of them are preventable. When it comes to illnesses associated with obesity, cancer rates associated with tobacco use, the lack of physical activity, and injury prevention, there are a number of startling statistics in Canada.
The shifting we're doing is the first of its kind. In September, for the first time, we signed a declaration on keeping Canadians healthy. That was signed with the provinces and territories. We committed to work together to combat the issue of obesity. There are other areas within our portfolio over which we have direct control, such as consumer product safety legislation and tobacco legislation. We're looking at prevention, illicit drug use by our children, and addressing mental health. These are programs designed to keep people healthier as well as to support individuals who require support, the more vulnerable. That is quite exciting.
Another area that is innovative would be the tripartite agreement discussions we are having in British Columbia. British Columbia first nations, the province, and the federal government have been working for four or five years on how to better integrate health care services for the first nations people within the province. The work we are doing with the British Columbia first nations is innovative. It integrates first nations to be part of finding solutions. They are at the table in terms of providing better programs in their communities.
It is an exciting time to be discussing some of those initiatives. I think they are changing how we deliver health care, in less of a silo environment, how we better integrate all residents in each jurisdiction to provide health care services, as opposed to first nations having certain services and that type of thing. It doesn't work, and we know that. The work has been--