Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the presenters. Your presentations in some way have made me want to yell “Help!” I'm sitting in for someone today, so I've not sat at this committee table for some time now, but the issues seem to be very similar to ones that were discussed when I was here.
My worry is that we have CIHI collecting the information that they're supposed to collect--fair enough--but indicating that there certainly are some differences in terms of availability of data, how people measure, and all of that across the country. From the Health Council of Canada we have some indicators of really the same sort of thing, either movement that is slower than it ought to be or indicators that we cannot find because they're not there.
None of this is anybody's fault. This isn't a finger-pointing exercise. But if we have two, probably three organizations, if not more, measuring or looking at similar things without the data to support how we do that, how do we fix this? I don't want to be here in six months' time and have the same kind of report: yes, we're moving forward slowly; yes, it's been a catalyst.
I would agree with one of the comments in here that the focus on the accord, at least in any kind of public way, is much, much decreased from what it was when it began, and so is the excitement around it--other than if you speak of wait times for hips, because then you can get people excited.
How do we go about integrating the information that people are gathering, for one thing? There's a lot of hunting and gathering going on out there. How do we integrate all of that information so that when we sit here, we hear something that has some match between the people who have gathered the information? And then, how do we more quickly ensure that there are compatible measurements so that when this information comes forward we know that it is at least empirically similar to what each organization is hearing?
I'm just worried about the lack of integration of the information, the inconsistency of the data that are being collected, the standards under which the data are being collected, and I guess the disappointment of people with the fact that this has not moved forward with more excitement.
Both people, please.