Thank you for the question. We've always taken the approach that we should have an adequately supported and funded public health care system. There have been so many pressing issues that we've undertaken and continue to undertake that, when we saw that the Public Health Agency of Canada was created and developed, this was one thing that was perceived to be actually doing quite well. We were very glad to see the differences from, say, the SARS days.
There are so many serious issues now in our system, for example access to care. Five million Canadians don't have access to a family doctor. We have inadequate access to mental health and addictions services. Seniors care is an issue. Palliative care is an issue. We have problems with our health human resources in remote and rural areas, with the remote and rural distribution of physicians across the country. There are so many issues that, once Public Health seemed to be in place, yes, attention was changed to these other pressing issues of the time, thinking that the public health system that had been set up was robust.