Great. Our goal is to keep people out of acute-care beds. Of course, much of Canada is rural and remote. Our health care system relies on people coming to services, not receiving services in their communities.
In the case of Long Island and Brier Island, for example, the paramedics do blood sampling and analysis in the community so that we can have just-in-time diagnostics so that a patient's treatment regime can be adjusted, for example.
On other diagnostics and services in Halifax, the paramedics who are going into nursing homes are now suturing patients in nursing homes. Instead of taking the person to the service, we're bringing the service to the patient. Really, paramedics do house calls every day, and the individual skills they require to serve Canadians best should not be hampered by regulation, for example. They should be finding the appropriate place and time to deliver the service.