Both doctors have mentioned how you can use telemedicine and other technologies to use nurses in a remote area, or just three blocks down the street in Toronto, for that matter. In terms of your own time as specialists, you already are extremely busy, so when there is an opportunity to help in a situation that's further afield, how do you manage to schedule that in? That has to be a problem.
You have your own patients in your local practice for sure, but when you're doing remote medicine, whether it's in Nain, Labrador, or wherever it might be, how do you manage that? Also, is there a way of creating greater efficiencies in that area?
I think Mr. Dibble said earlier that one of the problems for a rural doctor is that they're the only one there, they're on call 24/7, and they eventually wear out. I've seen that happen with my own doctor. So how do you not put yourself in the same position, as a doctor, when you're doing your stuff in your own practice and this remote stuff? How do you see creating some efficiencies so that we don't end up burning out the specialist too?