Thank you very much.
Thank you again, some of you, for coming back to the committee.
Dr. Gagnon, Dr. Raza, and Professor Morgan, thank you for your leadership on this case. You've been at this for years and years, I think, some of you. Mr. Morgan, you said you've been at it for close to 20, so it's great leadership in bringing this to the point where we as a committee are able to draw on the work that you've done.
We're wrapping up. I think this is our last meeting with witnesses before we begin to give direction to the analysts to draft the committee's report. My questions are going to be focused on some areas I don't think we have addressed yet and had testimony on, so they won't be too general in nature. They primarily focus around the federal, provincial, and national aspects of how things get done.
With the challenges of developing a science-based and evidence-based formulary and achieving the best negotiating strategies that we can in terms of buying processes, it seems to me that a national formulary—done in collaboration, obviously, between the provinces, territories, and feds—would be the ideal place for the formulary to sit. Do you agree with that?