I think rural health care is something that makes Canada unique except for perhaps only one other country, which is Australia. I am very glad you had a chance to hear from Roger Strasser, who is a tremendous leader in this field.
I would say every jurisdiction has tackled this challenge in different ways, starting with the educational system. British Columbia has put a branch of their school up in Prince George, Ontario has built a whole new school in the north, and New Brunswick and P.E.I. have bought residency positions to put in rural areas. Everybody's worked on education and thought about who's coming, where they're training, and how they're being trained, because it's fundamentally different.
Also, the practice patterns and the practice models and how you think about people working need to be very different as well. You have a completely different scope of practice in rural areas.
I've worked in Iqaluit. I've worked in northern B.C., in Hazelton, and in a lot of these places. I've worked right across northern Ontario, literally probably in a dozen communities, some as small as a thousand people, or probably 650 people in the winter.
As I said, we need very different models and very different education systems to support people there. It really needs to be a focus of your report.