I'll start. Then I'll turn it over to Michelle.
The program you are referring to is the underserviced area program, UAP. The intent of the program is to try to allow communities some funding to be able to provide for recruitment. That is being reallocated, in essence, and it's fairly complicated. I don't know that we necessarily need to go into the details here, but when you're looking at trying to provide incentives, I would take a whole systems approach, much like Dr. Strasser, and say we need to support undergraduate medicine, which in Ontario is not supported very well. Medical students, who are paying high tuition and so on, are not supported in coming out to do part of their education, and the research suggests the earlier and longer, the better your success rate, in providing communities with some infrastructure support directly to be able to support clinical teaching activities in all aspects. Allied health professionals as well as doctors are important.
Michelle is better able to answer your direct question about the program.