That's a big one in a couple of minutes, so I'll try to squish it in.
I think we can learn from what's been going on in Atlantic Canada and Q-14. I don't know why we haven't done it in the rest of Canada. That's not another jurisdiction, but it's here.
Do things early. If you have a reproductive level of the virus that's 1.5, or if you have an average of 400 new cases a day in an area, don't leave your gyms and restaurants open for a week and a half to two weeks. These are just very practical things.
Don't not engage people. If you have people volunteering to do things, don't say that a medical expert needs to do a test that you can train a 16-year-old to do, who's one of my best swabbers. Don't turf protect.
In terms of other jurisdictions, New Zealand has always been a leader in this. Australia's always been a leader in this. They engage and they fund public health a lot. They lead by public health—not by having other people on the stage when they're giving direction and advice—and by scientists. I'm a scientist, so I'm biased, but I think that's helpful, and when someone says to do something like that, you do it quickly.
I am recapitulating some of the things I mentioned earlier but also with a few specific examples. Don't go far. We have a fairly successful example here in Canada within the Atlantic. Q-14 is a big part of it. Definitive policy is another part of it, and rapid testing and continued testing are a huge part of it.