Of course.
There are several. I hope I've captured most of them I can answer, Madam Duncan.
On this capacity issue at the health care delivery itself, last time you heard Dr. Kumar and so on explaining. They are working.
In terms of a national plan, we have had our conference where we brought together all the intensivists and the persons, and there is also the network of the emergencies and the health care, and they are working on that.
There is one point I would like to make, though. It's important because this modelling and all those numbers that you brought forward--and we agree on them---are numbers that could happen if we don't have immunization, if people do not get immunized. That's the reason it's so important.
We have to work upstream.
How do I say that in English? We have to start at the beginning. Death is the ultimate result. Intensive care is the second.
The thing is that we have to work now to prevent it. Prevention is where we come in as the national Public Health Agency. The message is that if, for example, in the best scenario we succeed in immunizing 100% of the population, then the H1N1 will disappear.
It is important to know, and perhaps you heard this at the conference, that the efficiency of this vaccine is greater than all the vaccines that we have. It is well over 90%. So it has the capacity to stop H1N1, and that's the reason it is important.