I tried to point out some of the successes. I pointed out one success in British Columbia where, with a project like PharmaNet, pharmacists will have access to all dispensed prescriptions. They're picking up something like 2.5 million adverse events that could occur and are changing the prescription, typically in collaboration with the prescriber.
That was some seven years ago. Had this initiative not been started by the federal government and the provinces, I can tell you that today those systems would not be available in Alberta, Saskatchewan, P.E.I., or certainly in Ontario with all the emergency rooms.
There was a system that was producing great stuff, but there was no stimulus and no incentive to move it along. That has happened. Since we've been around, three-quarters of X-rays are now gone. We have the entire provinces of Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Alberta in which you won't handle an X-ray. No matter where you move, they can pull up your digitized images. Very important results have been produced.
I have to tell you that our 2010 goal really is a two-part goal. Part one says that by 2010 every single province and territory will benefit from some aspect of what we're funding. That, I can tell you, is happening. The other part says—the call to action—that 50% will have all of their meds, labs, and diagnostic imaging available through their practitioner. That's the one that is tough.