On the ground in first nation communities you have a nurse, not always a nurse practitioner, who is the only resource for primary health care. If you have the nurse in the community who can't manage or is not licensed to take care of opioid replacement therapy, it's not an issue of personnel. There are first nation communities in northern Ontario where they don't have nurse practitioners and they have somebody flying up from Toronto on a regular basis to administer the opioid replacement therapy. That's northern Ontario.
There are other communities across Canada that don't have those kinds of resources, that don't have financial resources to support that, or any kind of comprehensive response. There are no doctors, no pharmacies. There is no transportation to methadone maintenance. Yet prescription drugs find their way into these communities quite readily. The access and availability is there, but the resources to respond to them are absent, both in funding as well as in personnel. Relationships with governments provincial, health care systems....