I agree 100%. I think the federal government could pass down some words of recommendation to our professional colleges. I'll pick on the colleges for social work nationally as they tend not to do any specialized training at all. There's a great place and such a great need, and the social workers, in their training, could be learning more about things like dignity therapy. We tend to have to teach all the social workers a lot of this stuff when they come out before they start working in palliative care, because they don't get their core competencies in palliative care during their training programs.
Canada has done a really good job of looking at core competencies for social work, for primary-care physicians, for nurses, for almost everybody in the country. There's a national document that talks about that. Nova Scotia and British Columbia have produced their own provincial documents on competencies in palliative care for virtually all health care professionals. Those competencies need to be integrated within the professional schools so people have the skill sets to be able to deal with this.