Thank you, Mr. Sobara.
The terminology is “Don't throw out the baby with the bathwater.”
To your point, frankly, the majority of Canadians in fact have some form of coverage, whether it be public or private. There's been a recent Conference Board of Canada analysis that's been done. I know that the coverage systems in Canada are very complicated and difficult to navigate. I work in the pharmaceutical ecosystem and I have to sit down and figure out what my own coverage is and help my parents.
Nonetheless, I think a lot of this is about working together to truly scope the issue and to really identify, at the end of the day, the issue that we're trying to solve. It's to scope the issue and identify the uninsured population in Canada and the under-insured population in Canada. I believe that's truly the population of Canada that we are trying to solve this for.
A recent Mowat report looked at what they call a “targeted approach” in addressing the gap of the uninsured and under-insured. They were looking at the potential costs to run such a program—