I think that the momentum has already started. People will start receiving care as of May 1. That's when the first patients can be seen under the CDCP.
I'm going to speak from a dental hygiene perspective. Dental hygienists don't just work in dental offices anymore. Many of them work in long-term care homes providing care. Some work in rural and remote communities. They have mobile practices and have mobile vans to go around to communities that are underserved and never receive that care.
It's going to make a huge difference in terms of access to oral health care, which has trickle-down effects, as I stated before. It's really about preventing disease before it happens, and that's the key. That's really what the work of dental hygienists is all about: preventing disease.