For the vaccine, we will have the priorities in September. We will have the vaccine in November. The planning is already taking place.
There are some things that are obvious. Those in remote communities, those with underlying risk factors, health care workers, and essential workers are going to be at a higher risk level. But if you go into a community of 300 people, you're not going to do only half the community. You're going to immunize everybody in that community.
So again, the working out of logistics is going on now, the refinement of guidelines, the publication of additional guidelines, getting the surveillance in place, getting the negotiations in place. Things have been going like crazy. We are in such a different place today in terms of response. It doesn't mean that everybody is there. There are lots of people who still have their head in the sand, but that doesn't mean there isn't a phenomenal amount of work going on. In fact, as Shelagh Jane was saying, 90% of reserves have a plan and they have tested that plan, or whatever.
So it's not like there isn't a lot going on. There's a huge amount going on. Are we there yet? No. The fact that there are communities still waiting for someone to solve their problem for them, or whatever, is a different issue.
The advice is there, the guidance is there, the capacity is there; it's really about applying it and finding ways and asking the questions. If people aren't sure, ask the questions, because we have local systems to address them.