To add to what we've already heard when we've been talking about data today, I think it's really important that it be standardized and that it is being used for the right reasons. What we really want to see is a data-driven, outcome-based system so that we're using the data to make sure that we're accountable for the investments we're making in health care, and that it's driving the outcomes we want to see in our system. I think if we design it from that lens, we can then use the data to be monitoring what we're doing and seeing how close we're getting to the outcomes that we want to be seeing, and also to give feedback to the providers in the system about the care they're giving to patients. There are many ways that effective use of data could improve the quality of care and accountability in the system.
I think what's going to be critical and why we feel this needs to be a pan-Canadian approach is to allow for that standardization across the country and to make sure that we're creating those basic standards across the country so that we're all moving in the same direction. I think that's true from the patient data side.
From the human health resource planning side, I think the data is going to be needed so that we can actually know what we're trying to do. I think from what you've heard today, some of why it's hard to answer some of the very specific questions about things like how many nurses and doctors...and where exactly they are, is that we don't know.
The other problem is that sometimes we're not counting the right things. We could probably tell you how many people are licensed as a family doctor in Canada, but how many of those physicians are actually providing primary care in a rostered or longitudinal manner may be more difficult to do. That's why things like saying we need x more people is challenging, because if you add a thousand family doctors to a province but none of them actually takes on a patient panel, it's not solving the problem of access to primary care.
I think we need to be really clear about what we're trying to collect with the data. We need to make sure that it's linked to the outcomes that we're wanting in our system, and that the whole point of it is accountability, because we know that investments in the Canadian health care system are a very significant use of our tax dollars.