The administrative and paperwork burdens vary across the country. There are many examples to give.
One is how our EMRs—electronic medical records—function across the country, the varied number we have and the different vendors. Integration between the EMRs would certainly help. There's a lot of manual faxing that goes back and forth, tracking down additional results. To be quite honest, there are repeated lab tests and diagnostic tests, because you can't track down results. That would be one concrete example.
The other one is integration between family physicians and all the specialists they refer to. Most of that is done via fax. There's back-and-forth with specific forms or different types of forms. If we had an integrated EMR system, either a single source system or systems that talk to each other, it would greatly decrease that burden.