You've asked a lot of questions. Let me just stop and say, look, we're trying to run a 21st century health care system with 19th century paper. And there is absolutely no security in the paper world. Papers are used on movie sets and they fly all over Toronto--actual medical records. We've had those types of examples.
So yes, we have done discussions and polling with Canadians. Ninety percent of Canadians want the electronic health record as long as their privacy considerations are looked after, and they look to the people they put in place to make sure those are looked after. When they're told there be will an audit trail, that if there's unauthorized access they will be informed about it, the comfort levels certainly go a lot higher.
So from a privacy perspective, we are putting in a whole host of things--user identities, user authentication, access control, and a whole bunch of things. But the way the systems have been designed, you have a client registry that has demographic information; it's not a lot of use to most people. With the labs, the drugs, etc., not only is the data encrypted in there, but it has a code that has to get hooked up to the client registry before you can find out whose information it is. So even if you hack into those systems, you're not going to be able to find out whose information it is.