Sir, this is the way the target is measured. We have six core systems: drugs, diagnostic imaging, lab results, a provider registry, a client registry, and some clinical reports. As we look at a province, if they have 100% of their database completed in five areas but zero in one area, we count them as a zero. So we set a very high standard. They could be getting tremendous benefits out of the drugs, out of the diagnostic imaging, but maybe they haven't as yet got their clinical reports available. Where we're at today is looking to Ontario, in terms of the provider registry, to bring that on board, and we're looking at Quebec in terms of the drug information system they need to get on board before we can get to that 50% of data.
Now, I will caution and be quite clear on this. We're talking about the availability of these systems; we are not talking—and Madam Fraser pointed it out very astutely—about the use of these systems. The only analogy I can give is a situation where you have all these paper files. If you look at a building, you have to make the building available first before you can move the tenants in. You have to have the utilities in that building, etc. The statistic we're quoting here is basically having that building available. If you don't have the stuff in electronic form, you can't have use of it. So we have to move with availability, and from there we will see use.
I'll just add that in Alberta they have availability and they have 20,000 users using the file. So that will come over time.