Thank you.
It would be appropriate today to direct my questions to the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions. I know this is National Nursing Week. I spent Monday morning in my riding going to work with a few nurses and seeing what a splendid job they do in the health care facilities there.
When we look at the 10-year health accord, we see that there are certainly some success stories we can be proud of. I asked my local hospital what the patient wait times partnership has meant to them, and they mentioned to me 606 additional cancer, cataract, and joint replacement surgeries and 1,880 more MRI hours.
There have been some positive steps forward. When you delve deeper, there are some things we can learn from this, and I want to get your comments on them. When I look for things we can improve in the future, I notice the human resources issue is a huge one. In my riding, there are 30,000 individuals who don't have a family doctor, and the shortage of nurses is related to the shortage of doctors. I see this at the Royal Victoria Hospital.
There is a geographical disparity in health care services in this country. The level of service is not as high in rural Canada, in small towns. There are not as many medical professionals practising there. I'm not sure this health accord recognizes the challenges we have in this geographical disparity.
One thing we can look to improve upon is how we match our national expectations on a provincial level. I wonder whether we have all the levers required to ensure that our health care dollars are being spent on the priorities that you all have spoken about. I was intrigued, Ms. Silas, when you spoke of an audit of provincial funds coming from the federal government.
Could you expand upon that? Why do you believe it is needed, and what expectations would you have if there were to be more tools for an audit of these federal funds? What are your expectations for those federal funds, within the provincial administration?