Certainly, we appreciate your acknowledgement of the innovation in Saskatchewan as it relates to the health bus. To use that as an example, from a transportation perspective, we are quite literally pulling the bus into underserviced areas of the population. In Saskatoon, we pull into neighbourhoods that are predominantly first nations and reach directly into pockets of society that have traditionally underutilized resources in an appropriate time, otherwise waiting too late. Or we've been able to open the doors to populations of immigrants, for example, and been able to reach out to them without having walls around us from a hospital's perspective. It becomes more inviting because we're doing it on their doorstep.
Innovation has also assisted us in being able to provide technologies in the community. For example, you once would have to go to the hospital to have an ECG. Paramedics are now able to do not only a 3-lead but a 12-lead, a full endocardiogram, in the home, and that ECG can be interpreted in the RV, or the health bus in that example, in the back of the ambulance, or in your living room. So we can now do early detection of disease with the advancements of technology. And we're able to do other tests in the home and in the community for which at one time you'd have to wait for a laboratory to get the results. Basics like blood glucose monitoring, for example, and other diagnostics in the home can be done with the prick of your finger. Paramedics can now do that diagnosis and work with other health care professionals to ensure that you get timely access to service.