Well, I'd like to come back to the patient-reported outcome measures work, which I think is critically important to the future of our health care system.
What we're seeing is that there's only one nation in the world, and that is England, that is currently collecting population-based outcome measures on just a very narrow sliver of supply-sensitive and preference-sensitive care conditions. I think it should be cross-spectrum for the population so that we get a sense of where the resources are needed and which patients are suffering.
We need to start collecting this data when the patients are on the wait-lists, not just pre- and post-operatively but really through the whole trajectory of their care. When they show up at their GP's office with chronic pain and unmanageable conditions, and their quality of life is going down, that's when we should start measuring them.