That leads me to my second question, that the data is there but it's at provincial levels, some better than others.
Do you see there being a role for the federal government in acting as a clearing house, a place where they can collect all of the data that's coming through from provincial governments, and making some sort of national database out of it? It would be the same thing for best practices. If some provinces are doing some really great things about tracking physician prescriptions, about tracking misuse of drugs in terms of inappropriate prescribing, etc., then could we not pull that together into a database?
I think that's a real role for the federal government. We can get a scan, an environmental scan, of what's going on across the country, which helps us, as federal politicians, to understand the nature of the problem.
Do you see that as being of valid use?