I'll narrow the question down to physicians, because that's really what we've looked at quite a bit.
What I can say is that in 2019, as I mentioned, Canada ranked 26 out of 28 for the number of physicians per 1,000 population. I don't have the data right in front of me, but I believe that equated to about 2.8 physicians per 1,000 population compared to the OECD average of about 3.8. I may have my decimals a bit mixed up. The calculations would be based on that.
Of course, it's really, really important to narrow down exactly what the questions are. For example, as I mentioned, Canada actually does about the same, or relatively a little better, when it comes to family doctors per 1,000 population and is significantly worse when it comes to specialists. Even though that's the case, the demand for a family doctor seems to be a significant issue right now. In my opinion, that really represents a bottleneck, such that people are trying to get into hospital, trying to get treatment, but have to be treated by family doctors in the meantime.
With those ratios, as I said, I don't know what they translated into numbers, but that gives you a rough idea of how far away we are from the OECD average. That's not counting the [Technical difficulty—Editor].