If I can add to that, we know how many physicians are enrolled in these faculties. We know how many spots there are in the faculties of medicine in the country and we report the trend. This is part of this report, on page 30. We do update the statistics on a yearly basis. That was a flagship report, so it's two years behind, but we do have that information. It's made available and it can be traced.
In terms of internationally trained physicians, what we see is that we rely less on them than we have in the past. The number of internationally trained physicians in the physician workforce has been relatively stable, at about 13,000 to 14,000 out of 64,000 physicians, for probably the last ten years.
The issue of being self-sufficient is very complex, because there's also the right to a better future for people who live outside Canada. I think the ethical issues there relate to when Canada may be recruiting in countries where there is a shortage of physicians, countries in development, but we need to acknowledge that about one out of five Canadians are not born in Canada, and we have about one out of 85 doctors that are trained outside of Canada. I think we need to be careful about saying that we would need to have an objective of zero internationally trained physicians. That may not be appropriate.