It depends how you measure it. We have an Institute of Population and Public Health that is led by John Frank. In fact, Dr. Frank is now meeting with the Senate Committee on Health, with Senator Keon's committee, as we speak, to discuss public health issues.
So the area of public health and population health is one of those areas that is growing. It has been a very small community in this country historically, so you don't all of a sudden have a public health and population health initiative unless you have people. You don't grow people overnight. They have to be trained, and they have to have positions to go to.
So we are very much in the business of doing that. Dr. Frank has created centres of excellence in population and public health across Canada that are being supported. There are training initiatives in this area, etc.
In addition, the increase--although it is small in absolute dollars, and I agree with you there--in the funding of population and public health since we started is in the order of sixteen-fold in the last seven years. It is a pretty steep increase. In absolute dollars, it is still small, but again I think it reflects the small but growing size of the community.