I could just add that Canada is now moving in the right direction in terms of knowledge application. There's a big emphasis at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research on knowledge application.
The issue, again, is leadership and knowledgeable leadership. The example is that there's $300,000 that I feel is wasted, with good intentions to do some literature reviews, which already exist and which other people have done in the last year. It's just a question of not making strategic decisions in leadership.
Canada exports its expertise in suicide prevention. When the United States government, which supports a national network of suicide prevention help lines, was looking to have those evaluated, our university in Quebec got the mandate to do this, and from our offices in Quebec we listened to 2,611 telephone calls to stress centres across the United States.
But we don't have a national network in Canada to evaluate, and the government does not support such a network. It's a question that whatever funds are already out there should be used strategically to do things that will have an impact. As I mentioned, a lot of the things we can do don't cost anything.