Perhaps you'll excuse me for a second. I sometimes bemoan the fact within our organization that millions of people watch Canadian Idol, but if we were to have a show that sought the opinions of all Canadians on their opinions around health care decisions and societal values, we probably wouldn't get even 5,000 people voting or even watching it. That it's a challenge is what I'm telling you.
Yes, I believe that societal values are something we'd all like to understand better. They move, they change--and I just mentioned willingness to pay, willingness to risk. All of these things are crucial elements, and capturing some measure into the process is tricky. We have two members on CEDAC who are public members or non-expert members chosen for being non-expert. But do two people represent the public? No. If we had a committee of 30, would that represent the public? No, not really. So it is tricky.
So where does the rubber hit the road? Well, it actually hits the road in the provinces, where the decision...and this is where Mr. Wright and his department do hear from the public on quite a significant level, I believe. So it happens through another way. We don't have a process where we can engage millions of Canadians to find out how they would act or behave or vote in a certain situation. However, we do know through the feedback, and deputy ministers then guide us with that information they hear from the public.
Do you want to add to that?