No, I wouldn't say that.
First of all, I'll make a couple of points. Health care, as we know and as I mentioned in my opening remarks, is the responsibility of the individual provinces and territories. It's their jurisdiction, and therefore it's difficult for the federal government to intervene in what is a provincial and territorial responsibility.
When it gets to the point of clinical diagnosis and treatment, as I mentioned before, that is also in a sense the purview of the experts on the front line, the clinicians who are represented by various professional organizations and are in the best position to look at the evidence around the world and make a.... They're taking the best available evidence into account to develop guidance for their members. In that sense, I would defer to those experts who are on those committees in those professional organizations to develop the guidance.
In terms of various guidance out there, we certainly respect the fact that IDSA, which has been referred to, has developed guidance. In a sense, our counterpart here in Canada, known by the acronym AMMI, the Association of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Disease Canada, also concurs with the guidance put out by IDSA.