Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
I would like to join my colleagues in welcoming all of you here today.
It has been an amazing panel. This whole study has been amazing in terms of all the different ways we've been challenged to understand technology. And obviously, there are competing dollars. Whether you're looking at life-saving and life-prolonging measures or you're looking at managing health issues, or disease prevention and health promotion, there is a competition for those dollars.
I am from Saskatchewan. I mentioned that earlier. It has a relatively small population, just over one million people in a very large geographic area. That forces us to be innovative and to do what we should do long before we have to.
I was the chair of the third smallest health district in Saskatchewan, so I know full well all the challenges that rural communities face when it comes to the provision of health care.
I believe all of you are obviously champions of empowering individuals and of health promotion and disease prevention, and you obviously appear to be leaders in embracing innovation and technology.
My question for you is whether you can identify some barriers to moving forward with innovation and technology that you are facing in all of your different fields.
We've talked about incentives and the value of incentives, but what are some of the disincentives you see that exist in moving forward?
Anyone can start.