Thank you, Madam Chair.
I am going to carry on the same topic as my colleague.
The federal health minister is holding round tables with his provincial and territorial counterparts right now. They are discussing the expansion of community services and services to help young people with addictions, meaning those aged between 10 and 25. Obviously, they are also talking about early intervention as a form of prevention.
Those are happening right now.
I heard earlier, Krystal-Jyl Thomas, that the system was hard to navigate. We also heard that the system is broken. I want to hear your comments on that. You mentioned psychiatry. You mentioned that donations—not even government—are funding the program. That's scary, to say the least.
There are also eating disorders. I have personal experience with youth up to 18, and then they go into the abyss, really, because there are no services.
I want to ask a question. I'll start with the Royal Ottawa Health Care Group and then go around. Right now, we are negotiating with the provinces. What best practices or outcomes or results would you see that the federal...? You mentioned virtual care. We don't have much time, so could you give us three or four points on what is needed in a federal-provincial agreement? Should the federal government be funding in the next 12 months, until this agreement is done, directly to communities, bypassing the provinces? I just want to get a sense of the urgency today, and then how you negotiate that. If you were talking to the ministers of health, what would you tell them to look at for those high-level agreements?