Thank you for that clarification.
I agree. I think that there's, let's say, a history in public health of crisis response. Understandably, public health has articulated surveillance systems to respond to crises, and sometimes these operate at a bit of a lower sort of oversight threshold because of the emergency nature of the response. I think that working with that culture, working to push that culture...let's say “enable the culture”.... I think public health professionals have had a tremendously challenging time in this pandemic and being under-resourced, for example. Could we resource our public health professionals better to attend to things like these kinds of implications that I've been flagging, the privacy implications of the crisis decisions that they're having to make?