Well, there are two things. First, there's a lack of comparability of data across the country. Different provinces are measuring things differently. You'll find, for instance, in certain provinces you are not put on a wait list. Even after you've seen a specialist and you've been told you need surgery, there are another two or three steps before you're actually put on the wait list.
Second, in our opinion, there are major concerns with the fact that governments are tending to target the four or five specific areas. As practising doctors and surgeons, for instance, we see resources being narrowed. We call it the balloon effect, where you take resources--whether they be nurses, doctors, or money--from one area of necessary care and put them into another. That's the problem with starting off with only five targeted areas; there is that balloon effect.