I think you are absolutely correct. The issue is that technetium will not disappear any time soon. Technology exists. You don't go from 80% technetium usage to 0%, even in five years.
The problem is a lack of foresight by Canada over the past 20 years, and I mean Canada in the largest possible meaning. It could be the government, Health Canada, physicians, or whatever. We did not put in place enough alternatives to technetium, so today we are paying a big price. Europe has done it differently. They have evolved a positron emission tomography program across all the countries, and that basically enables them to navigate the crisis better.