Thank you for your question.
I think it is precisely this concern about services in your language that has led to the investments and initiatives we've seen—the $200 million and our close working relationship with the minority language communities across the country. We need to understand their priorities. I think we should all be seized of the concern that you raised. When you're sick, when you're at your most vulnerable—that's when having services in your language is probably the most critical.
We have significant responsibilities for first nations people across the country in Health Canada, and we see this same response in trying to support first nations communities. There are some people there for whom English is not their first language, and we try where we can to support them.
Let me come back to your point about minority language communities. It is for that reason that we have made these investments and worked with the communities. For example, we see some provinces and communities who have said they need mental health services, and they want to create that network.
We've supported training so that we would have people who have the curriculum. Sometimes we work with all of the medical schools, some of the nursing schools, and others to create the capacity in their training. People may have francophone abilities, but unless you have the technical knowledge, it may be difficult to practise medicine.