What you're saying is that a report is coming tomorrow, and by September you'll have some sort of plan.
My request is that you table the report with us after you receive it, since you're going to get it tomorrow, and then you say your implementation plan is for September. I would expect to see also that you table the implementation plan of what you intend to do with that report at the same time, so that we know what you intend to do with that particular report. We don't want to see it collect dust. Clearly this is a huge issue for all of us. You can see on both sides of the divide here, both groups are very interested in what exactly we're going to do with this.
The Auditor General was very clear about you needing to do something. You were very clear in your response that, yes, you would. So now we are very clear about making sure you actually have an action plan and get it done. We'd appreciate you tabling that.
Let me move to the assessment and response to safety issues, on pages 22 and 23 of the Auditor General's report. It goes back to 2009 and 2010, which isn't that far removed from now. There were 99 assessments of potential safety issues, but what I would draw to your attention is that of those particular issues, 54 weren't identified by Health Canada.
Let me break down the chart for you: 25 of them came from actions by foreign regulators; 15 came from scientific literature, not yours; 9 were from adverse drug reaction reports from previous Health Canada assessments; and 5 were from safety information provided by manufacturers—so you had 54. The vast majority of them Health Canada never saw. Someone else saw them and gave them to you. That's one statement about what's happening or not happening, in my view.
The second chart, exhibit 4.5, gives a performance of how you did and whether you met your requirements or not. If it was a high rating—there were none, so you didn't have any to look at in 80 days. The medium-potential safety issues, you have 130 working days. Of the 54, you assessed 29 of them. Sixteen you managed to get done within the timeframe, and 13 you didn't. That's a significant number.
When it came to low-potential, where you had 200 working days to get it done, you had 25 assessments reviewed. You got 18 done, and 7 you missed.
Can you tell me how you're going to do better than that? Quite frankly, with those marks in school, you would fail. You wouldn't have graduated high school with those marks.
So can you tell me how you intend to make sure that, as we head to 2012, 2013, and 2014, we're not going to see this as parliamentarians, and more importantly, that Canadians aren't going to be with this sort of a standard that, quite frankly, is below standard? It's not an acceptable level—it's not even close.
Besides the fact that you have more resources and you hired 130 or 160 more folks, can you tell me what the action plan is, so that when you set a standard for yourself, when you say 29 need to be done in 180 days, you're going to get 28 done and you're going to have a reason why you didn't get the 29th done.