[Technical difficulty—Editor] department. I practised emergency medicine for 20 years.
Of course we write a lot of prescriptions, and as you've said in your presentation, approximately 10% of prescriptions aren't filled. There is data from emergency departments that suggest 60% of prescriptions written in emergency departments aren't filled. There is a lot of speculation. Much of it is that there are many people with much lower incomes who receive all of their care through emergency departments, and it's not a reach to say that it's the poorer patients, and therefore they can't afford these.
Has there been any data, or does anyone have any data, on a system where through emergency departments—say, if there are prescriptions written through the hospital base, or a not-for-profit pharmacy—there would be a saving at least for this population of patients? Has that ever been looked at?