Yes, and I couldn't agree more. Thank you.
Again, because these problems come down in the emergency department, we're often left knowing what this patient needs, but it's often hard to find the right thing, and it defaults to calling internal medicine to admit the patient.
You actually touched on the next question I was going to ask. One of the hats I wore during my career was provincial medical director of the land ambulance program for Manitoba. We were starting to make explorations into community-based paramedic care. There's a very good program in Winnipeg whereby paramedics go out and regularly assess high users of the emergency department to prevent emergency department admissions. For other areas that are very underserviced, paramedics can go out into the community and perform certain tasks, such as some home care tasks, immunizations, and medications. In the isolated, northern, and remote areas, do you see a role for an organized community-based paramedic strategy in the care of these patients in palliative care?