I'm glad to hear that.
With respect to staffing, in my riding of Renfrew-Nipissing-Pembroke, the riding where Petawawa is situated, we have upwards of 20,000 civilians who are now orphan patients; they don't have a family doctor. There's a shortage of doctors. It's the way the provincial government limits health care costs. By keeping the number of family physicians down, you keep down the number of referrals and the diagnostic testing; wait lines are therefore diminished. It works out for the government coffers, but not exactly in the best interests of the patients.
You mentioned that you were looking at various services. I notice that in the United States, in 2006, there was signed into law federally a sweeping bill that adds marriage and family therapists to their front-line health care workers.
What sorts of possibly non-traditional medical professionals are added to help cope with the stresses that might not necessarily require a psychiatrist but need preventive care along the way?