Yes. To answer your first question, it is. We have brought this up to the provinces numerous times across Canada. Secondly, Canada's primary health care transition fund funded a study from 2004 to 2006 to establish interdisciplinary cooperative care. They established models. They put together a tool kit. They put together ways in which to do this and were ready to set up demonstration projects.
Unfortunately, there was no funding for the EICP findings, so they have sat on the shelf since 2006, until now, and there really has not been an opportunity to demonstrate that these cooperative things will work, and that when you remove these barriers, various practitioners, primary care providers, and secondary providers can work together as well.