Yes, absolutely. In B.C. we have an expedited toxicology policy, whereby the provincial toxicology centre will turn around toxicology results for us in 48 hours. It's the only service of its kind in Canada. We've worked with the lab for a number of years to get that in place. Once somebody's died, it tells us the substances in their system. I think what the police officer is talking about is that when they see a number of deaths, they want to be able to isolate the source by having tested at Health Canada. We don't have the capacity to do that. We can only do the post-mortem testing, which is valuable, and we do share that.
In B.C. there is the Drug Overdose and Alert Partnership, whereby the Crown, police, public health, health officers, the coroner's service and the provincial toxicology lab meet on a monthly basis to talk about all the things they're finding and share information. It's been fantastic in getting interventions. My colleague from Oregon recommended something similar.