It is a large and very important part of our conversation. I'm sure that David will talk about this. The challenge is that we need to have immediate actions to prevent people from dying so they can get to that point. You're absolutely right. Sean just said it: nobody grows up wanting to be addicted to these drugs and wanting to die on the street from fentanyl. That is not people's aim in life. For example, we have found through InSite—where we have InSite and OnSite—that treating people with respect, getting them to the point where they are managing their addictions and not dying from them, helps them make that shift and get into treatment and off drugs.
I think one of the challenges we have is that we're stuck in an anachronism around detox and treatment that is based on alcohol and on 28-day abstinence programs for alcohol. These do not work for opioids. The physiological dependence on opioids and what they do to your body and your mind are very different from alcohol addiction. Opioid substitution treatment is a way of getting people off illicit drug use. It is used instead of detoxing, which is something that puts people at great risk of overdosing and dying and is very traumatic and difficult. The substitution treatment is not meant to be lifelong for most people. It's a period of time that allows them to get off the illicit drugs and to then taper off the substitutes in time.