Yes, the first framework you refer to is the federal framework. That's really within the federal family. As you say, that was developed in 2014, and an action plan in terms of what federal departments could or should be doing was released in 2015. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, we recognize that the federal government alone is not the sole solution to the AMR problem. Even besides other levels of government such as provincial and territorial, there are other key players, academia, industry, and so on and so forth.
With that, recognizing that we need to bring other players to the table, we actually engaged in a process to develop what we now call a pan-Canadian framework. We have four structured task groups involving experts from both the animal and human health sectors. The framework has been developed. It's going to be imminently released. It has four pillars. There's the additional pillar of infection prevention control along with stewardship.
Once that plan is made public, I imagine in the coming days or weeks, very shortly, we will get on with the heavy work of then developing a concrete action plan, which will include all the stakeholders beyond the federal family.