Okay.
I guess being Nova Scotians, we understand some of the challenges we face. I worked as a volunteer and a board member in a hospital system and so on. Collaborative practices become a big focal point within the health system and for two reasons, which I understand from the 12 years I spent as a volunteer. One is the silo system that tends to exist in the delivery. Communication was abysmal, and that's a national problem. It's not located just in Nova Scotia.
In the collaborative practice, we've seen in Annapolis an example go ahead whereby the teams literally sign contracts so that they work together. You know what happens to the patients; they have to see the doctor, they won't want to see anybody else, and so on. Although there are glitches, the process and the principle seems to be a very valued one.
Not to make an absolute parallel, but is that the kind of context you're trying to push that forward in?