I respectfully disagree with Mr. Genuis.
I can give you a personal example. In the House of Commons, there are people who have asked me for medical advice, from the opposition, from my own benches, serving staff, police officers, sometimes administration staff and sometimes the bureaucracy.
So I have a wide range of people in Parliament itself, and I say that because nobody will ever know who those people are. There is something sacrosanct in medicine that no law will change. To suggest that a law is going to compel someone to do something.... Especially in the medical profession, that is the one thing that we keep very, very close to us, that medical professional relationship.
So putting it in or not putting it in, I can tell you, practically, is not going to work. It's better just to remove it and not cause any further complications to the passage of this bill.