Yes, obviously, I do think that we would be better off to have a pan-Canadian strategy.
I think the research studies done in Alberta or in Quebec or wherever in many instances have applicability elsewhere. Context is very important when we're talking about professional practice and so on. We need to use what we know works in one area and then try it in other places, in other contexts, and make sure, by replicating or adapting what we know in other contexts, that we get it right eventually.
There's a lot that we know about what we could be trying differently that I don't think is going to be very different in any of our provincial jurisdictions, but we need to bring it to a level of national discussion so that we can work together and make sure that what we apply in fact does work in a number of different contexts, is the right way to go. Then we will have the basis from which to begin to think about our long-range planning, whether we have the right number or the right types, and so on and so forth. Doing it just one little tiny bit at a time, one research project, whatever, is simply not very cost-effective, I don't think.