In terms of some of the very specific things we're doing to improve collaboration and help each other as a system, we have a group that meets regularly and that shares practices from one jurisdiction to another. We do that actively. Every year we get together and come up with our biggest national priorities that we want to work on together to improve performance, recognizing that some provinces may be focused on other things as well. Where they have incomplete adoption of DCD, that may be their primary focus right then, and that's okay. We always share freely.
One of the things that we're most focused on now in terms of a priority is really addressing what you just brought up, which is looking at what our donor potential really is. We need to ensure that we have mandatory death audits across Canada, in every single jurisdiction, that are as real-time as possible so that we can really understand what our potential is and whether we are missing opportunities.
We know that donors can be lost at any point along that clinical pathway, so we need to be auditing that pathway and making sure that where we're losing donors, we are fixing whatever system issues are preventing us from actualizing that donor. We have done a lot of work in that realm together, including donor identification and making sure we have consistent national clinical triggers so that people know when to refer a donor. We've been doing a lot of things like that in terms of leading practices, where we're sharing that knowledge across the country.