We absolutely agree with the idea that a quality audit must be conducted to make sure that patient safety and quality standards are being met. The auditing process has to be efficient, and make sure it exposes what needs to be exposed, and that any issues are dealt with. In this particular case, what we're talking about is two different pathways within Health Canada, or whatever, in terms of the audits. The MDSAP audit, which is very extensive, is conducted, and then out of a different department or division, the MDEL audit comes along, and is doing most of the things that the MDSAP is doing. It's repetitive. That's what doesn't make sense.
On February 7th, 2019. See this statement in context.