Yes, I do. When I put that out there, I'm putting that out there not just on behalf of my particular College of Family Physicians of Canada, but on behalf of the other two organizations that we often work together with, the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, as well as the Canadian Medical Association, all of whom believe that this country needs some kind of pan-Canadian infrastructure for the coordination and management of health human resources in this country.
The problem is that it is happening haphazardly across the country. It's happening in different jurisdictions. Some are doing better than others. We could sit here for the next two weeks talking about the patchwork of good locations and bad locations to practise or to work in. There are places where people have access to health care, primary care services, and places where they don't. Some of that is the result of poor planning, but it's difficult for those jurisdictions to plan solely on their own.
As we've gone around the country, we've realized that we really don't know at the end of the day who has access and who doesn't have access unless we start to create some kind of registry, unless we start to actually try to distribute a little bit more equitably than what's being distributed right now.