That's one of the first questions we ask: are you covered and do you have access? Again, we're able to tell you that coverage, the level of coverage, is a big driver of whether or not people are struggling with their costs and dealing with barriers or not. Obviously, those who have no coverage or the least amount of coverage have the highest propensity to report that, yes, they are struggling.
To your point around whether you are covered or even know if you're covered, again, that requires a deeper dive into this subject that would certainly benefit from further investigation. We can only ask questions: Are you covered? Are you fully covered? Are you partially covered? Are you not covered at all?
Whether or not people realize they have access to it but haven't themselves gone out and gotten it, that represents a gap. I would suggest that where coverage exists and people are not taking up that coverage is something for those providers to speak to. We can only speak to what people think they have.