It depends on the province. Many provinces do have prescription monitoring programs. In Alberta we have something called the triplicate program. I think we have a very good program in a lot of ways, because we have a provincial health record, which all physicians have the ability to log into. The majority of physicians do have access to that.
If you are directly involved in the circle of care for a patient, you can log in and look at the patient's prescribing data. You can log in and see what the patient has been prescribed and dispensed, from which doctors and which pharmacies. That allows physicians to make timely decisions. I think that is really important.
For the provinces that have prescription monitoring programs, we gather that data and we can use that information on stimulants or opioids and so on to identify potentially high-risk patients and high-risk physicians, and to look at how to interact with their physicians. That's really important. That's the other piece of monitoring, which I think Beth is alluding to. I think it's critical.