I would say that Alberta currently has the lowest prevalence rates in the country. The government there has done a lot of things to support people with diabetes. What's happened is that we have a growing and aging population in Alberta, and we have a different ethnic mix. In fact, 80% of the immigrants who come to Canada are from high-risk populations. They're more susceptible to diabetes. So you have a growing and aging society, a different type of mix, and a growing mix of different populations within Alberta.
I would also mention that these are locked in. There's nothing we can do to prevent this from happening. These rates are going to happen. So really our focus needs to be on what we can do to prevent those people from developing the serious complications. Eighty per cent of the costs associated with diabetes aren't from treating diabetes itself; they're from treating the complications when folks with diabetes don't comply with their regimen.