I want to sort of make a pitch in response, if I may, that perhaps as this committee—and, of course, the government—is considering how to look at research, how to examine it and how to assess it, it might also consider some contributions and funding that are specifically delineated for looking at problems in the literature—in other words, sleuthing behaviour, which is what is mostly done right now by volunteers, even though publishers and universities benefit from their work.
If you look, for example, at the case of the Office of Research Integrity, which is responsible in the U.S. for oversight of research at the National Institutes of Health and some other agencies, its budget is about $15 million versus the $48-billion budget, roughly, in U.S. dollars, of the NIH.
I would have you all maybe consider whether or not there is a way to use some of the funding that is now being used to fund research directly, to fund analysis of that research and to actually keep a check on it. I believe the public will be much more confident in what it reads about what it's funding with its tax dollars and what eventually, in many cases and certainly in the case that you mentioned, could contribute, if it's done properly, to better health and better outcomes.