I'm sorry to interrupt you again. My point is that there already are two bodies that look at price: the trademark, patented-medicine side, which is represented by the gentleman to your right, and then the pCPA, which negotiates on behalf of the public drug program.
What I see too often is that CADTH says yes, but with substantial price reduction and for a limited patient population, as in the case of Spinraza. I have constituents who do not get access to it because the provincial government says, “You can't have access to it because you fall outside of it. Oh, and negotiations are ongoing.” They still can't get access to it.
It just seems to me that there is a disconnect, which is why I asked you the question in the beginning: How closely are you tied to pCPA? Shouldn't there be either a dual process, where negotiations are started earlier, or early on, along with the review; or should there be more parliamentary oversight, so that parliamentarians—if we're footing the bill, the taxpayer is paying for this—have more oversight over what you are doing in order to streamline the system?