Look at the United States, for example. They started into their second wave several weeks before us. While they had a small amount of vaccine a few weeks earlier than we did, it was really a very small amount. We've now immunized at least twice as many people as a percentage of our population as they have, within the first two or three weeks of the campaign. It's the same in other countries. They have much smaller amounts of vaccine actually in people's arms.
When we assess all of this in terms of the pattern and the evolution, how much is due to the fact that we were delayed in the second wave because of all the other things we've been doing, everything from treatment to prevention, and other things? We may never know for sure, but clearly we did not experience the same level of activity that a number of other countries did. We did the vaccine in Canada.... While there were other countries that had some small amount of vaccine earlier than we did--not very many, but a couple--we very quickly have overtaken that lead in terms of our ability to immunize the whole population.