Certainly when you look across the country, each jurisdiction is a little bit different. For example, in Ontario I used to use licensed practical nurses, under the supervision of RNs and PHNs, to deliver the routine vaccine programs, and they can be mobilized.
I just got a letter from the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association. They give immunizations all the time, to a different species from us, but again, they have the skill, and with the right information, as Shelagh Jane is referencing, we have other supports there. We actually have a lot of experience with large mass clinics in different settings and having the supports there, so that the nurses can focus on what they need to do, answering questions, getting the immunizations done. There are nursing students, medical students, a whole range of people who are being looked at, and as I've heard, pharmacists included. All the jurisdictions are actually working together on how we can maximize our ability to immunize quickly, no matter where people are in the country—and clearly, isolated northern communities and others that are going to be a very high priority in terms of getting that done.