Thank you very much, Dave.
I really appreciate that you have all been thinking about this, and you gave some examples: physician assistants, anesthesia assistants, arthroplasty assistants, and nurse practitioners. People are trying to experiment with more effective models and the team-based approach. You did put some good thought into that, and I appreciate that it's the AFMC talking about the federal government probably having a good role to play in actually monitoring different models and encouraging some experimentation, but mostly monitoring and documenting the best models because some might work better than others obviously, especially in rural areas.
Talking about urban-rural areas, I'm just a little concerned because 80% of our population is urban. All the resources are urban, and of course we have to get past that somehow to serve the rest of Canada, which is outside our big cities.
For example, and this fits in with telehealth, in British Columbia there is an innovative cancer clinic in Vancouver where they are treating patients. The oncologist is treating, and there are four GPs, and now expanded to six. They are doing some innovative work that is getting good outcomes by upping vitamin D levels, counselling and managing stress, giving them good diet and exercise, and so on. The province has expanded the program. They are reaching out through telehealth to the rural areas with high-needs patients and then connecting them so they can always get through to somebody to explain what's going on in their body. It's an innovative model.
We want to expand models like that, but this is integrated medicine in a sense.
I wanted to ask quickly about orthomolecular doctors because you have some licensing and regulating issues here with doctors who practise outside the box, and somebody recommends a licorice supplement. There's a lot of interest in the public in clinical nutrition where low-cost, low-risk things actually can give some benefits to the patients. They are interested, but we have some trouble with the regulators.
Would one of you care to comment on that? I know some of the colleges are actually interested in establishing faculties of integrated medicine since the public is interested. Why are we having trouble with the regulator?