Thank you.
I think there are two things, and both of them are pretty similar to what Dr. Bowmer has already said. On the capacity issue, assessment in the country from which the IMG is applying to enter Canada is important, but it's also important to realize that there will be a clinical observation period, and those are extremely resource intensive. If we're trying to standardize how this is done across the country, there may be an opportunity to pool resources. There is only so much you can do in a centralized or regionalized system because at one point it has to be practice-relevant. It has to happen in the setting for which the licence will be awarded, but there are several issues that could be pulled together in a form of either a centralized or regionalized assessment modality for the period of clinical observation. You cannot bypass that before you award any kind of licence.
The second issue comes back to the expectations. We hear these stories all the time, particularly at the IMG symposium: “That isn't what I was told before I came to Canada”. That is frightening.
We think the Foreign Credentials Referral Office is doing a wonderful job, because they are revving up the information that is being shared. However, what I keep telling them is they are now dealing with a group of people who have already been approved to come to Canada. We need to talk to these people before they make the decision to come to Canada.
That's what I'd like to say.