I'll try both of those.
To the first point, one of my recommendations, and one that I think is really important, is to start to collect outcome measures and patient-based outcome measures that we can tie these results and these initiatives to.
In fact, I'm actually running the only population-based, patient-reported outcome measures, funded by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research, in the Vancouver Coastal Health authority right now. I think it's a great initiative to understand how the dynamics of preference-sensitive and supply-sensitive care are affected by these funding mechanisms, but I would like to see that expanded. I think there's definitely a role for pushing out standards and identifying what standards are in terms of outcome so that we can compare between and within procedures, and between and within provinces, in the allocation of resources.
There are many people working on the efficiency and the health human resource question you're bringing up. I'm less familiar with that, but I know a lot of efforts are ongoing in the field.