If I understand your question, you're asking me if we have some sort of cost analysis of what is being saved by funding the.... I think the answer to that is no, but there is definitely a cost to patients not filling their prescriptions and not treating their diseases, whether it be diabetes or heart disease.
As for whether we can actually cost out the patients who didn't fill their prescriptions and ended up in emergency or having heart attacks, I don't have that number for you, but we know there's a human cost—along with a system cost—of not filling the medications. Our suggestion was that, at the very least, a catastrophic coverage of no one having to pay more than $1,500 a year would certainly be a start in working towards making sure that all Canadians who need their medications can obtain them.