I think theoretically it works. Practically, I'm not sure how that works. I think when you start getting into the different regions there are problems with coordination. Communication is always a big factor in those kinds of scenarios. In any national strategy there are always going to be regional demographic differences. How do you communicate effectively between the national level and the regional level, which may have a better understanding of what's required and better communication?
What we've found is that if you have it more regionalized.... I know the larger strategy is important, but you can have large strategies that are in the region. I think that's what you have to build off of. That's the best way forward. You can't connect at the same level from a national perspective. You can't connect locally as much as a more regional body would.
That's what we've done. We've been connecting very closely with the communities. We have people in the communities who work with our organization. What we've found is that we're better received, our communication lines are better and we continue to get a great deal of confidence from the community in our organization. We think it should be the same thing with any health strategy.