Can I just add to that? I think that's an excellent point.
What's happening in Europe now is that the EU has just announced expert reference networks. These are grouped around 40-some conditions. Some of them are rare, some of them are not, but usually they're around different kinds of conditions. That's exactly the concept: it's within these...and they're right across Europe. They don't just work within the boundaries of one country, they actually span Europe. Clinics have to bid for them. They bring together all the experts from around Europe that would be part of it. Most of them are virtual centres, but there are actual physical sites for most of them.
To be honest with you, there's a great model for it. They have criteria, they have evaluation, and in order to qualify and to get the funding for them, they have to meet a very high standard. I think we could use that model in Canada. Even more importantly, as we talked about this past week, if we got our act together, and we actually had Canadian reference networks, we could actually make them part of an international reference network.
Again, we would have the opportunity to do that. We don't have to reinvent this. The models are there. They're built exactly, as Dr. McCabe says, on the kinds of networks we have, but in many cases, except for hemophilia and some of the others, they are much more informal than they are formal.