Thank you for your question.
We're talking about prescribers, and often they're medical doctors but often they're prescribing nurses or other specialists. Actually in the new curriculum, because of the importance of AMR, this is more and more discussed. Now they are young students who are asking for a curriculum on how to be better prepared in not providing antibiotics to somebody who is asking for them when it's not clear yet whether they're required or not. Antibiotics are mostly used in the community, not in hospitals.
It's only 30% of the antibiotics that are for human use, and out of this 95% is in the community. That's really where it will have a lot of impact. Of course, the pressure is big in hospitals, but it's in the community practice also that we have to.... A sore throat may not require antibiotics. This is part of the curriculum now in education and because the problem is getting more and more serious.... Here in Canada, I think we're still doing fairly well, but there are regions of the world where there are no more antibiotics that are capable of treating some very bad bugs, the superbugs that we're talking about.