Maybe I'll start.
Then you can follow up, please, Sue.
There is quite a communications plan moving forward. You've seen the earlier phases.
We'll be working closely with the manufacturer in terms of delivery in the provinces and territories. They say they're looking forward to the continued vaccine. At some point we will have enough vaccine to immunize all who need it and want it, and then it's an issue of what we do with that and how we manage that. We're in consultation both with the manufacturer and the provinces and territories about that. We're not there yet, but as we get there, we'll need to have that in hand.
On the other question, I guess people are getting more comfortable with it, but the reality is that we have 20 million people still potentially at risk, who have not either been ill or been immunized so far. Of those, if we have a 25% attack rate, eventually—not in the next few days or weeks—we'll get over the hump and then we'll see smaller numbers. But then you're looking at 4,000 to 20,000 hospitalizations just in that group, 500 to 4,000 in ICU, and 250 to 1,000 deaths somewhere. This is still to come, at some point, if we don't get more people immunized.
Nobody should be complacent about it. I know of young twentysomethings who unfortunately have died or are in ICU on ventilators. It's impossible to predict which ones will be affected in that way. This is not like seasonal flu. It's a different group, by and large, that is more severely affected and it is something that is cheap, simple, and easy to prevent through immunization.
Sue.