We absolutely are as a country. I've talked about the diagnostic imaging systems. In the diagnostic imaging systems we've now basically thrown away all those X-ray forms. About 70% to 80% are now digitized, which means, in fact, that those X-rays can be looked at from anywhere.
Let me give you a quick example of this. Several of our provinces now are completely digitized. We're just moving in that direction with Manitoba. Just a few weeks ago they finally got Churchill done. The day they had Churchill digitized, a child presented with injuries. Typically, they would have flown a jet out of Winnipeg to bring the child down, but they did the image and sent it down to Winnipeg Health Sciences Centre. They looked at it and said there was no need to move the child and this is what they need to do. The very next day another child presented, and this time Churchill thought they could actually work with the child up there, but they sent the image down. They looked at the image at the health Sciences Centre and said, we're sending the jet, bring the child down right away.
So there have been huge changes. We have 25% to 30% productivity gains with our radiologists. That's basically adding another 500 radiologists.
I talked about the drug information systems. Let's take Alberta. They're clearly at the leading edge. Alberta today has an electronic health record, and they have 20,000 users of that record on a daily basis. They've been able to build chronic disease management systems and registries very quickly on top of the electronic health record.
Take cancer surgery. We now have a system of cancer surgery where the clinicians are starting to record just the minimum data sets as soon as they do the surgery, as opposed to transcribing their reports. The change in that is the transcription reports used to basically take over a month to get them in hand. They can now get their reports after one hour of the surgery. They're reporting 100% of those items, and they're training our new doctors on best practice.