Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I appreciate Mr. Barrett's clarifications. I'm not sure that I disagree with anything he said. There's no question that the committee can revisit our schedule at any one time.
I guess the question I have in my mind is that the subject of this meeting was based on a circulated agenda and schedule that was sent around, which I took the time to read and study. It reflects the agenda that was made by this committee, like I said, maybe 60 days ago. I think it already deals with some really important subjects.
We're obviously two thirds of the way through the health care human resources crisis study. Children's health is an absolutely laudable goal. In fact, I think the product of our discussion was even amended a bit to include something that I wanted to talk about, which was the school nutrition aspect or the food security of children. That was graciously passed by the committee.
Look, there are 10,000 issues in health, and there are about 700 number one priorities. They're all important. I think that it's somewhat disingenuous to suggest that there's no sense in prioritization or even preference, depending on parties. My priorities may not be the same as the Conservative's, Liberal's or the Bloc's priorities. That's not to say that all of the issues aren't important; it just reflects different senses of prioritization.
When I say that there hasn't been a subject that I consider to have been generated by us, it's not that I view the subjects agreed upon to study as unimportant or unworthy of study; they just don't necessarily reflect my priorities. For instance, I wanted to study dental care. I wanted to study the opioid overdose and substance use crisis. I'd like to study women's health. I'd like to study indigenous health. I'd like to study breast health.
On that point, to respond to Mr. Barrett—and in fairness he wasn't here—when the Bloc Québécois put forth their motion to study medical devices or breast implants, I tried to amend that motion to be a broader look at breast health generally, and that did not happen. I'd be absolutely thrilled broaden that subject to look at breast health generally, but one of the reasons we've allocated only two meetings to that Bloc Québécois-generated subject was that it would be limited to medical devices, in other words, a federal breast implant registry. That was my understanding. If we were to look at breast health generally, we'd need more than two meetings.
Back to the point at hand, I think that what we need to do to be most productive is use the calendar we have in front of us. I've studied it; I think it's a good one. I think there are a couple of things that strike me about it.
I do think we need to study COVID every week, for the reasons I said, and I won't belabour them. I will say as well that with regard to COVID in children or in any other aspect, the subject is completely broad. Every party can put forth witnesses on any aspect of COVID they want. If, say, the Conservatives would like to explore the impact of COVID on children, they're certainly free to call witnesses who can speak to that. There are dozens and dozens of angles on COVID, and I would not want to restrict them.
Particularly, as Mr. van Koeverden said.... You know, we probably have to get to first-name basis on committees. I'm going to start using first names, if that's okay. You can certainly use mine. As Adam said, with COVID's being so fluid, who knows three weeks from now where this virus is going and what we'll need to focus on? I think that's one of the advantages of keeping a watching brief on it. We are flexible to be able to respond to the latest change in COVID. Maybe there will be a discovery three weeks from now of a treatment. We may want to explore that, for example.
My last point on the calendar is that I think it's good the way it is, other than I noticed that there seems to be, for a number of meetings on the children's health study.... There's a Monday and a Wednesday that say either “COVID” or “children's health”.
If we agree to stay the course, as we decided before, and keep one of those meetings every week on COVID, that would mean that the children's health dates would be bumped further. By my reckoning, what will get done by June is basically that we'd finish the study on health care and human resources, and hopefully we'd finish this study on children's health. That, then, leaves consideration for the other motions that we passed, including the one Mike just moved, to put in the mix for what we look at in the fall. I don't see how we can look at anything other than finishing off the HR study, then the children's health and COVID studies between now and the end of June. That's assuming we don't get knocked off our agenda by, as I said earlier, legislation or other issues that may come up.
Thanks, Mr. Chair.