I would say no more so with Quebec than with any other jurisdiction. I would argue that when we get into these conversations, because the field of health and health education is a provincial jurisdiction, the reality is that on almost all topics there is a large degree of provincial and territorial divergence.
The number of opportunities to truly get everybody on the same page in a seamless way is extremely small, because we increasingly have very different systems, health needs, and structures in each jurisdiction, but I would say that there is surprisingly little conflict. It's much more of a sharing of best practices, to be honest. I would actually argue that the real enrichment comes from the table.
The most important part of the meeting, in my humble view, is that we set out about probably a third of our meeting to go around and have every party, including the health professional representatives and associations, talk about the pressing issues. We have it broken down and reported on a specific template in a consistent manner so that we're all reporting in similar ways on similar things.
Knowledge translation and examples of best practices are a huge focus for what we do; that still allows us to respect the individual jurisdictions and what they do. I know B.C., for example, just decided to take an action on Canadians studying abroad that is very different from what the rest of Canada is doing, and now they're having some fun experiences with that. Each jurisdiction is going to play a little bit differently, and there's certainly an opportunity and respect for that.