Yes. Thank you, Mr. Wilks.
What we're looking at here is basically trying to change behaviours. What you're asking is no different from how we get people, regardless of where they are, to be physically active. How we do that is to make these solutions the easy solutions, so there's easy access. However that patient is interacting with the system, whether it's through the Internet, telemedicine, through their phone, it's easy. Also, we must build their confidence in it. There are some barriers around health literacy, or e-health literacy, as well, with patients, and comfort levels. Now what we'll see as time goes on is that more and more older people will be using these devices more so, mainly because it's a cohort age thing. As we all age, we'll be still using these systems. So there are these challenges. I don't have, off the top of my head, the single answer that we can do here, but making sure that people have access to that information would be the first thing, and then engaging it and ensuring that the providers....
The other thing that you talked about is whether patients should be their own doctors. We talk a lot about the self-management, proactive patient in primary care. But a lot of patients don't want to be proactive. There are a lot of patients, who you've described, who want to go in and be told what to do and then go and do it.
We have some barriers to deal with there, but I'll stop there to let the other people respond as well.