Thank you very much for the question.
We support universal pharmacare in Canada. There are too many Canadians who either don't have coverage or are under-covered.
Universal pharmacare can be achieved in different ways. Quebec is probably the best model to suggest. They actually have universal pharmacare. It's just built on both the private and the public plans. There are advantages to that, just as there are of course probably some disadvantages, but on the front lines we see some of the advantages that building on that coverage we have brings to Canadians.
The reality is that private plans are more comprehensive than public plans, generally. As we move forward, our hope is that the public plans would actually raise up and the access for Canadians would not be brought down. I think that building on the strengths of those, of the mix, is probably a good place to start.