 My name is Grant Russell. I'm from Monash University and I'm the chief investigator in Australia for the Impact Centre of Research Excellence. So we're trying to work to identify innovative local solutions to problems that vulnerable communities have with accessing primary health care. What we've done is we've formed these six separate communities, three in Australia, three in Canada and in each of those areas we're trying to work together to address these so-called wicked access problems. Then in parallel we're conducting research with our international team to try and inform what's going on on the ground. So we think this is really a new way to look at bringing research to practice to impact. We're early in the piece. It's only 18 months into a five-year project, but we're already beginning to be struck by the enthusiasm and some of the lack of evidence that's out there to inform policy. We've found some interesting things. We've found some of the challenges but some of the real opportunities and enthusiasm with building local research partnerships. We've found some of the paucity of evidence around access for vulnerable populations to primary health care. And we've also found, compared to that, how much work's being done all over the world. We've identified 215 separate access innovations that are trying to address the problems that we're seeking to address in our local communities. The impact is evolving. I think our early impacts have been that we've helped individuals who are both researchers and community members, clinicians and policymakers, identify that they can work together to address some of the really challenging problems with which their communities are faced. And we've learnt through that that there's some quite specific core needs that the primary care community can address to work together. And the problems in Canada are not that different from the problems in Australia. So we're trying to work together to get a collaborative answer to some of these challenges.