What we have is regional staff who in fact are going to all of the communities. As you know, Dr. Bennett, a lot of this work has been going on since really just after SARS. Really, within about a year and a half of SARS we had started to organize information sessions with communities to talk to them about the importance of pandemic planning, and we then got into the actual pandemic planning some time after that.
You're quite right, some of the initial work has been done by conference calls. We've used e-mail and whatever means are available to get to the communities. Of late, and particularly since H1N1 emerged, but before it emerged in any of the first nation communities, the regional offices put a more intensive effort into going to the communities. Our pandemic coordinators have been to virtually all of the communities by now, and they know which communities have a plan. In fact, not only do 90% of them have a plan, but 70% of those have been table-top tested.
So we're quite confident. We do take the word of the community organizers who tell us that they've completed the plans. We've provided templates and we've provided examples. We do trust that they know when they have a plan.