Thank you for that answer. I don't agree; I think if other countries can decide that they will no longer allow for generic OxyContin, we could. I don't know what our reasons are for not doing this.
Many countries, such as Scandinavia and Switzerland, have a HAT program, which is obviously heroin replacement therapy. The studies that have been done by NAOMI and SALOME in Canada have shown very clearly that for a small group of patients who are addicted to heroin and who are not responsive to methadone, they can benefit from prescriptions of diacetylmorphine.
I know that the department itself has actually agreed that it should be allowed under the SAP program, that it should be given to doctors who ask for this prescription. The minister has said no. Can you tell me if there is any move to let the minister read or to show the minister the clinical trials that are telling her that this is going to drive these people who cannot respond to anything other than diacetylmorphine and heroin, to go back on the streets and get street drugs again, when they could be treated with a pharmaceutical product that has been proven to be so internationally out there? Is there an answer to that?
Dr.Taylor, maybe you can answer it.