How about doctors and hospitals? We did both of those. There was a time in Canada when neither doctors nor hospitals were covered in the public sphere, and people paid out of their pockets for what was, I think, generally accepted as inferior care, compared with having a pooling of risk so that everybody was involved as a community in providing care to everybody. Not everybody gets sick and not everybody needs to go to hospital, but everybody helps cover those people who need those services.
What I would say is we are looking for that same approach with regard to the third strand, which is, of course, pharmaceuticals.