Thank you, Mr. Racette.
I am going to ask some questions now of the panel. This has been a very interesting panel today, very diverse on a number of levels.
Dr. Montaner and Dr. Kerr, thank you for your presentations today. I want to also congratulate you, Dr. Montaner, on your Queen's Diamond Jubilee Medal. It is well deserved. Congratulations.
I was very amazed, because I've known some of you very well over a very long period of time and have seen the kinds of things you're doing. This committee has been very brave in doing innovative study. What we attempted to do in the beginning was to look at processes all across our country to see and share the most innovative processes. It's like—I don't know if you've studied this—Ausubel's advanced organizers. The theory states that you piggyback on ideas and you understand where those ideas come from.
Along the way we've talked a lot about preventive medicine, in other words, dealing with people to live healthy lifestyles. We have an aging demographic, as you know. We have a population of children who are obese, so that is something that we have looked at. The committee has also looked at end-of-life issues, if someone is chronically ill, staying home as long as they can.
We've also found out that across the country the lines are blurred. It used to be that the doctors did one thing, the nurses did one thing, and the patient was sort of left out there. Now it has become a more collaborative circle where the patient is very much engaged in their health care. We've also seen in some of the northern areas that emergency responders, who we will have at the committee in due course, have taken on the issues when they make home care visits. They do IVs and things like that because there's nobody else around to do that. That happens up north in Nunavut and places like that.
What we are trying to do is look outside the paradigms that we generally had. I think today is just a classic example of people who have honoured us by coming here today and sharing best practices.
Dr. Bohm, one thing I know about is your clinic at the Concordia Hip and Knee Institute, which does amazing things with hips and knees. You had the same stream—I don't think you talked about it—where the doctors are so involved in terms of the design of better hip and knee replacements. I've actually gone into your labs.
Colleagues, if you go into their labs, they have rows and rows of hips and knees. I don't know if I ever want my hip and knee replaced. You look at that, and they're so interested in making it even better.
Could you speak a bit to that collaboration? It's quite unique.