I have just a couple of comments.
I would agree with the responses here. It's not just organizations like ours that have been focused on the prevention side of the equation for a long time. Actually, the Canadian Medical Association is also calling for an investment in the prevention side of this situation.
Most of the people using the acute health care system are actually there as a result of lifestyle choices--or, in the case of lower-income people, an inability to even have a choice. Addressing issues of prevention, particularly those social determinants of health that we mentioned earlier, will begin to change the demand on the system. It is really the only way out of a spiralling demand on the acute system: to try to affect the demand side, as opposed to keeping on putting money into the supply side.