Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to all the witnesses for your testimony today. It was very insightful.
I'm going to focus my line of questioning on data, starting with Dr. Lynk.
A number of times in your opening remarks, when you talked about the national health human resource data.... Recently, you responded to my colleague Dr. Kitchen's question on a planning tool whereby you would be able to see where the supply is, what the situation of supply is and where the demand in the future is going to be. As well, you responded to the role that a national youth commissioner could play in using data to be able to look at jurisdictions where they're producing some really good results and being able to compare them.
Can you expand on where you think the data for children's health should come from? I'd really like to get an understanding.
If you're going to develop a children's health data strategy, who should be developing it? What should be the element of that strategy? Who should be monitoring it? What jurisdictions need to collaborate together to be able to collect that data, and how will that data be able to help us form the policy that we need in the future?