If I may be so bold—and I've had an opportunity to talk to some of you about this before—I think this is an opportunity for the federal government to take a dramatic leadership position and say that it will only pay for health systems that truly incorporate inter-professional collaboration.
I keep coming back to the public service health care plan, but it's a very big and very expensive example. All it takes is the stroke of a pen from the Treasury Board Secretariat to say that we are going to allow these teams to work collaboratively so that you don't all filter through a bottleneck to access these services. That's one example, and it may be the best example in terms of what you could do this week.
Beyond that, in our proposal, we talk about how it may be time to talk about funding for implementation when it comes around to the 2014 health care transfer discussions and so on. It's not too early to start talking about that. There are some dramatic successes that came out of the 2004 funding model, whereby innovation was rewarded. I think we can do the same thing, but we would surely encourage that bold first step to lead by example.