I understand.
What is Health Canada's obligation to communicate? There has been a shortage since the spring, and it took the Conservatives tabling a motion in our committee to try to find out what is going on. Despite that, we haven't had any data.
Since you are talking about supply and demand, I will use the example of the announcements that have been made this week on amoxicillin. What I'm hearing from the manufacturers and the people who trade in it is that it has created a panic among parents. In the last few days, the quantities of this drug that have had to be ordered are unprecedented.
What I understand from this, at least as an economist who has contacted the industry, is that the communications from Health Canada are so bad that people learn the bad news at the last minute and panic. You are part of the problem right now. You're contributing to the panic among parents and the abnormal increase in demand, which makes the shortage worse.
I have been paying attention to what the Minister of Health has said since the spring. He has said, among other things, that health funding is futile. Whatever else he has said, he has never alerted Canadians and families. He never reassured them and never explained the processes.
Do you have a job to do communicating with Canadians, or do we really need to drag you in front of a committee, like today, to make you talk?