It's not that. If you're in a rural or remote area you certainly are disadvantaged in terms of access to health care. It doesn't matter what country you live in. It's the same everywhere. It's a question of what services are available to get people to health care services and what services can be developed that are going to support people within their own community.
I think there are some good examples of very small community nursing posts and nursing stations that certainly do support small communities. In some rural settings, people have access to general health care more quickly than most people in cities have access to health care.
There are both disadvantages and advantages. If you're talking about specialist care, clearly specialist care is delivered in major urban settings. So there's got to be transport and support mechanisms to get people to those specialist care networks. I don't think any government can say we will have equal access to specialist health care, no matter where you live. No government can do that.