Certainly B.C. has declared it a public health emergency in B.C. If you look at the definition of an epidemic as set out by the World Health Organization, it has to do with levels of death or disease above an average level. By that definition, certainly in British Columbia, as declared by the government, it is indeed an emergency. If you go with that strict definition, I can honestly say, because of some of the data limitations unfortunately, it's impossible to tell you if that definition would be met in every other province, but certainly we see growth in Alberta as you said and signs that it is moving eastward. We've heard from police in Ontario indicating that.
I think from our point of view we are treating it as an emergency to help jurisdictions across the country have what they need in order to be able to respond. We as the federal health department are putting everything in place within our areas of authority and encouraging others to do the same, so that not only can we respond in B.C., but we're ready for when it emerges elsewhere.