Sure.
On the issue of how we partner with provinces and territories, when the Public Health Agency of Canada was created, an entity called the Pan-Canadian Public Health Network was created. That council is a partnership of the federal, provincial, and territorial governments. The council really does provide the entry point for us into discussions with our provincial and territorial colleagues, and it focuses its efforts on three main areas.
It focuses on healthy living, which obviously includes chronic disease prevention. It focuses on infectious disease prevention and control, and it focuses on building public health capacity. Of course all those intersect with each other, but because we have the chief public health officers or the assistant deputy ministers of provincial and territorial governments around that table, that provides us with the pan-Canadian forum for setting priorities, understanding each other's perspectives, and advancing important joint frameworks or joint agendas to move forward.
A really good example of that is we have developed with our provincial and territorial colleagues a framework for action on overweight and obesity in children. That is a joint effort of FPT governments moving forward together using the levers that are appropriate in each of our jurisdictions to prevent childhood obesity and to share across the country the most effective policies and programs so all jurisdictions can benefit.
On the issue of international partnerships--