I want to concur with you. As a physician, I actually have seen that happen. When you've given people Narcan, they wake up.
Here's where we have to manage what the risk is. The issue is that I'd rather have somebody a bit agitated, as opposed to dying. From that perspective, in Ontario we are actually looking at the naloxone program so that it's not only Public Health Canada handing it out. We're trying to work out that at the point where opioids are handed out at the pharmacy level, that's the place where the person is. Can we actually educate the family, whoever is picking up the prescription to take the naloxone?
Much like an EpiPen injection, we need to have that innovation in Canada. Right now, you have to fiddle with the syringe and it dries up. It needs to be cheap, and it needs to be like an EpiPen and you just inject it. I think there's some huge opportunities for Canada to show leadership in this innovation piece of developing products that can be used, similar to an EpiPen, for overdose prevention.