We're partnering at many different levels. One element of the partnership that has been crucially important to us across a number of different public health issues has been the Public Health Network expert group that panellists sit on. That's an area where we pull together experts from the associations, from academia, from the provinces and territories, to work on injury prevention and chronic disease prevention in a very orderly fashion in terms of setting a work plan, getting the agenda, gathering the evidence, making recommendations for interventions, and learning more about best practices. That serves to bring the jurisdictions onto a common page and acts as input to many of the strategies where we're working far better together with the provinces and territories. As a result, when the ministries of health announced this past fall, their declaration on health promotion, injury prevention, and prevention with an emphasis on obesity and injury prevention...the action plans being developed under those will be common across many of the provinces and territories and will rest on a lot of the work that the expert group does.
In addition, we have cross-department initiatives in the federal government on family violence, for example, where we're working with a number of departments on the federal family violence initiative. We also work with Transport Canada on helmet and road safety. We use their numbers, for example, on a lot of the traffic accident information. So we have networks that go across the federal family, so to speak, to try to get the various partners in.
Increasingly, we are working with the Federation of Canadian Municipalities on obesity prevention, healthy cities, and of course injury prevention, and what they can do in terms of standards.