On the state-federal division on health, in the Australian constitution, health was one of the issues given to states, but in the interim one hundred or so years, the federal government has become more and more active in health. In fact, now large quantities of the health portfolio are covered by the federal government.
Where the boundary is, is a moving feast, frankly; it goes in and out, but generally in the direction of more federal participation. In fact, last year there was a suggestion by one of the state health ministers that the whole health portfolio should go entirely federal, that the states should withdraw from it. This was, of course, because of the escalating cost of health and the thought that the federal government was best placed to address escalating health issues.
So health is now, you might say, a shared responsibility, but more and more it's a responsibility wherein policy is done at the federal level and administration of a lot of the hospitals—not all—is done at the state level.
But you have some DVA hospitals, have you not?