Thank you for the question.
I'll start answering the question by finishing answering the prior question I had, which was around the reason for slow adoption given all the good benefits we've seen around mobility. It seems in health care there's a high degree of skepticism, a high degree of risk-averse behaviours, which would be appropriate in a health care setting, although for things like increasing access to information and other things, through mobility or other technologies, I don't think we can do worse than we're doing now, when much of our information is on paper.
An approach that has been persistent in health care for some time is we identify a problem and we try to adapt the technology to meet that problem, and then we move on to the next problem. So what we've done is we've created a number of good solutions, but they address micro-problems.
My suggestion in my briefing note is to elevate our view of the problems in health care to a higher level so that we can look at integration across the entire health system, from health promotion through to long-term care and the acute—