I can add to what Dr. Whiteside said. You raised some excellent points. There are so many factors that contribute to the risk of people developing diabetes. Even if everybody went to their doctor for an annual physical, one of the challenges we face right now is that not all health care practitioners are screening people for the risk of diabetes consistently with the clinical practice guidelines that are based on best practice.
One of the things that diabetes 360° would do is work to address that as quickly as possible by integrating prompts within electronic medical record systems and that kind of thing, to make sure that if your grandma goes to the doctor, any doctor or nurse she sees will screen.
The second thing is we need to make screening more available where people are, so maybe in the pharmacy or the grocery store or the community centre, so that people are more likely to become aware that they're facing the risk of diabetes.
Unfortunately, it's the kind of thing you have to keep doing, because one year you might not have diabetes or prediabetes, but the next year that might have changed. It's not a one-time thing that you can do and then you're done.
Overall, we have to try to find ways to make screening and treatment more consistent across the country, as well as improving the primary prevention environment the way that Dr. Whiteside was identifying. All of those are part of our recommendations.