The World Health Organization put out a definition based on a worldwide model. In Canada, unlike in the U.S., we've taken a different perspective on specialist palliative care. We don't differentiate between hospice care and palliative care in Canada the way they do in the U.S. Some of that was driven by the U.S. having a hospice benefit. We don't have that in Canada.
When we talk about hospice palliative care—or just palliative care, you can drop the hospice—it's what we refer to as specialist care, the stuff that happens in acute-care hospitals, usually with intense pain and symptom management, that type of thing. This palliative approach to care came out of a movement in Australia, to actually try to.... It's not the specialist palliative care.
You know, my grandmother at 93 had dementia and had been sick for seven years. She never took a pill. She was healthy physically but not mentally, so she needed a palliative approach to care. Even within Canada there's different jargon used. There's advance care planning and so on. I don't think there will be conflict. It will be interesting. The three definitions that we gave you are the ones we used in “The Way Forward” project, which seemed to get a lot of support, so it should be fine.