If I may, I would like to add to that answer.
In fact, our objective is not so much to create jobs as to evaluate the effectiveness of new health care interventions and determine whether those interventions will have a positive impact on the public's health. This should not be considered as a gain in jobs in health care. These computer-based virtual tools may involve creating a few new jobs, but it is mainly the expertise of the nurses, pharmacists and physicians that is being put to use in this case.
The indirect impacts will be more in the health care technologies industry than in the health care system, given that the professionals who work with us already have jobs in a clinic, a family medicine group or a community network. We therefore cannot talk about job creation as such. In any event, we will have to make sure that this is eventually marketed, which is another matter.