I'll give you the perspective from the officials' point of view. The preoccupation of our regional offices is always to make sure that our nursing stations and the staff at the stations, whether these are run by Health Canada or first nations, have the most up-to-date information from the provinces, because we operate as though we're under provincial jurisdiction. Of course, nurses and doctors are licensed in the jurisdiction where they're working. So we make sure we're passing along or facilitating the flow of all of the guidelines and those kinds of things from provincial authorities that are absolutely critical for the medical staff to have.
In addition, at the very beginning we did a large mail-out from headquarters to first nations communities to help build awareness so they knew what was going on. Of course, we work very, very closely with the Public Health Agency in all of these endeavours. We know how important these are. And of course, we've also made first nations aware of the website, fightflu.ca, for those who can gain access.
Our regional offices take this very seriously. Their perspective, which we share, is that you cannot over-communicate, so it's much better to bombard people with legible, understandable materials than to risk missing somebody. So that's the approach we've taken.