I think it's entirely appropriate that this committee, among others today in Ottawa, is talking about confidentiality, but when you underpin, you explore what confidentiality is meant to promote, it's so clear that sometimes we don't think about it, but it's there to promote people coming forward.
We keep these things confidential so that someone feels that it's not going to be shared with another person, so they can talk about their depression; they can talk about their anxiety; they can talk about whatever health issues are plaguing them to their pharmacist, to their doctor, or whatever the case may be. That's because we want people to get better. We want them to safeguard their own health. That is a fundamental imperative, which I think supersedes any objectives that have been articulated otherwise and which is why that doctor-patient relationship is so sacrosanct. I think that's important for this committee to underscore.