That is a wonderfully complex question, and not my current work.
There are two things. Health care inflation is a Canada-based thing. Because we purchase civilian products—we train from there—even if we deliver the care, we purchase it. It's based on those inflation rates. That is data that needs to come from elsewhere.
When you look at how much we actually pay, that data base is building within the Canadian Armed Forces. When you ask whether there are going to be specific areas, health care that is delivered to CAF members is always going to be funded.
My reinforcement piece is controlling how much we spend in comparison to a civilian receiving the exact same service. It's what we're being charged for. I have to go back—it's a bucket with water in the bottom. Every time you slosh it one way, there's a space. The Canadian Armed Forces and the Department of National Defence make no money. They spend. That's what they do.
You need to indirectly hit it by looking at what we're being charged and where we're being overcharged. “Overcharged” is my opinion; that doesn't reflect the department. However, the data is a baseline there and building.