The one thing I can address is wait times. The Canadian Medical Association, in partnership with the Canadian Psychiatric Association, established a Wait Time Alliance, and that was to benchmark what they felt were appropriate wait times. They said for urgent cases, on referral from a family physician, one to two weeks would be a reasonable wait time, and for elective or scheduled cases, the wait time would be two to four weeks. So that's the benchmark from the Canadian Medical Association.
The Fraser Institute, from January to April of 2007, looked at the wait times for psychiatric care in all the provinces, and I'll just speak of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, of which I'm more knowledgeable. For urgent care in New Brunswick, the wait time to be seen by a psychiatrist was two weeks, and for elective cases it was eleven weeks. In Nova Scotia it was one week for urgent and eight weeks for elective. In our clinics we provide an initial intake assessment within five days, and in both Gagetown and Halifax, someone will be seen by a psychiatrist within three weeks if it's elective or non-urgent, and if it's urgent, they get the intake assessment the same day, and most times they're seen by psychiatrists the same day. So not only are we beating the present provincial wait times, but we've already met the Wait Time Alliance benchmarks. I think that speaks to the wait times.
I don't know if anyone else wanted to comment.