The provinces and territories have primary responsibility for the design and delivery of their health care systems. They are responsible for the choices with respect to the priorities they make and how they deliver services to their population.
Canada is a considerably decentralized federation, where provinces are able to levy taxes and, for the most part, decide the activities to tax within their jurisdiction. Determining whether or not provinces are pulling their weight and providing services the way people want to see them is a question for each of the populations in those provinces to challenge their governments on.
The federal government does have a role in terms of the Canada Health Act, a certain amount of national standards, encouraging mobility across the provinces, and ensuring that programs like equalization help provinces provide comparable services at reasonably comparable levels of taxation, but beyond that it really is up to the individual provinces to determine and to answer to their electorates as to whether they are doing enough.
They have made commitments. We are seeing progress. The funding is flowing the way it was intended to flow. Beyond that, as I stated, I think it is up to the provinces to determine.