I'll jump in. I never miss an opportunity to discuss how we can remove barriers.
Of course, people want access. We always hear that accessibility is a barrier. From our own network, which I'll reemphasize that we've been building for the past 15 years, we hear that the barriers are now starting to be physical, the physical space. Our clinics are saying that they have more clinical people who want to work for them but that they have no physical space to put them in.
When we established this network, there was an urgency that we had to start opening clinics. We opened them alongside long-term care facilities, because we already had a relationship with those hospitals. But hospitals are getting old and people are starting to be cramped. We've maximized the physical space. I would say that the biggest barrier today is physical space in our clinics. They want to expand because clinicians want to come and work there. If we could do that then, we could see more people. The capacity issue right now is physical. We would improve our access times and our wait times for all the clinicians, simply by having more space.