The Auditor General actually made three specific recommendations linked to what you've just mentioned. The first one is related to CFHIS and is again not my area of responsibility. I do know that the project is progressing, and specific details can be obtained through the chief of staff of the Canadian Forces health services group, under whom the project falls.
The two concerns that the Auditor General specifically touched on with respect to the credentials and competence of military health care providers had to do with compliance with our program for maintenance of clinical skills on the one hand, and on the other the fact that we lack the mechanism to ensure that all our care providers actually hold appropriate licences or credentials.
Since the report came out, the latter of these two has certainly been a particular area of focus, and the credentials cell within our directorate of health services delivery, to whom I would refer you for specific numbers, has been moving forward very aggressively to confirm that everybody does have the appropriate licensing. I can tell you that we have confirmed that 100% of our military physicians are licensed by a provincial body and that they have also focused very aggressively on verifying the numbers for pharmacists, dentists, and nurses this year, as a starting point.