Really, the federal government does have a role to play in trying to engage the provincial governments that have not been as active or engaged in the process. We're quite fortunate in B.C., where the provincial government understood the net benefit to the province of appropriately engaging on HIV early on.
One thing would be to look at policies about things like copayments for publicly funded medications. Those are really deterrents to people getting effective treatment. The other thing would be provincial policies on testing and access to testing. Again, we have this kind of promotion that everybody should know their HIV status in British Columbia. It's not that testing a whole bunch of low-risk heterosexual people is necessarily a direct way to end the epidemic, but we're hopeful that it will remove the stigma around offering an HIV test. It's part of why some people may not get tested or engage in care and that kind of thing.