This is a forecast, because we don't have the exact numbers yet, but in 2014, for prescription drugs it was $28.8 billion in total. If you add over-the-counter drugs it's going to get up to more than that. The private sector share is divided between out-of-pocket contributions—and I believe we made reference to $6 billion before—and private insurers with $10.1 billion of that. Provincial drug plans spend $10.4 billion, which is 36% of the total. Then the federal drug benefit plan is 2.1% of the total, and that's $600 million. Then there is some other publicly funded drug expenditure.
Also, we were looking at data about out-of-pocket expenditures. We said $6 billion, and that's the number we saw earlier. I saw that number jump drastically back in 2010 to 2011, I think. I've been talking to the health information people about what happened there. I think a lot of what gets categorized as out-of-pocket expenses is coming from the pharmaceutical industry in another form of rebate that they're giving to individual consumers to be able to offset what they would otherwise pay in terms of copays at the pharmacy. So, it would be interesting to unpack those out-of-pocket contributions a little bit more, too.
Sorry, I went a little bit further.