Based on all the research we've done, based on all the money that's been spent over the last number of years, and based on the fact that all of the research since 1996 has never been consistent in terms of how it was completed--but at least, at the end of the day, there's research available--how long would it take for us to develop a general practitioners kit with respect to this issue? How much time would it take to put a kit together?
I know that some folks on the other side of the House aren't happy about five-point plans or five-point priorities, but there are five of them here, in this framework for action. These could help build the strategy and develop for 20,000 practitioners the four- or five-page kit that Mr. Szabo talks about. I think that would actually identify for so many GPs in the country, in a very practical way, how....
When women go in to see their general practitioners, when they're thinking about getting pregnant and asking about the issues related to it, why could we not, in a very practical and meaningful way, based on all of the research that's available, create a kit for each one of those general practitioners in this country?