It's a great question.
It's the only model of its kind in Canada and we're proud of the innovation. The folks who developed it and who are expanding it are certainly presenting it in many environments. I'm sure they'd be happy to go to Halifax, Nova Scotia—it's a beautiful place to visit—and share the model and information. It's certainly a scalable model.
I would say one advantage we have in Ottawa related to child and youth health, but also other parts of the health care system, is that—Nova Scotia might be similar—we are big enough that we have a series of specialized services: a children's hospital, francophone and anglophone addictions treatment facilities, crisis programs and so on. We're big enough that we have a comprehensive system, and we're small enough that we can all get in a room and figure it out.
Some places are too small. They don't have the organizations, or the scale isn't sufficient. Toronto, for example, is too big. It's much harder to organize a larger number of providers and organizations around systems.
I think, in Ottawa, we're in a bit of a sweet spot, but I would expect, knowing the folks at IWK and the role they play in the province, that Nova Scotia is probably a comparable scale and can pull off some of these kinds of innovations.
I'll send you the information about 1Call1Click.