I'll make the comment as well that it may actually be easier to do those diagnoses for seniors, except they aren't the ones who are online as much in those areas.
There's a priority here. I was just at a hospital foundation dinner on Saturday night in my own constituency, so it's very pertinent for me to be able to ask these questions here. I come from a largely rural area. People have to travel distances, sometimes a couple of hours, to get to a major facility or a major hospital. There are rural hospitals. I'm wondering what your experience is with nurse practitioners. It came up in my experience in the Manitoba legislature. We were dealing with nurse practitioners and trying to promote them as doing quite a bit of the work that doctors do today.
Is there a greater need for people like nurse practitioners in some of those rural areas versus our major hospitals to be able to alleviate the shortage of physicians we have, which is directly proportional to the needs and care of youth? Can you comment on that? There are regulations and things that we've talked about for online, and yes, it's nice to be able to do that, but is there anything that a nurse practitioner couldn't do for youth development that doctors are presently doing in those areas? How would nurse practitioners be able to help alleviate the shortages we have across the country today?