I'll just add to that. I've done a number of telehealth clinics and phone clinics with my patients. The respiratory patient is like any one of us. There's a lot of anxiety about what they should and shouldn't do and how they are going to manage the activities of life like going for groceries, getting their prescriptions and adapting to this.
I think that the stress and anxiety of that is certainly as much as it is for anyone in the country, but I'm going to say that, with the resources the Lung Association and the Canadian Thoracic Society have provided, a lot of them cope as best as they can. There are videos we've developed for at-home exercises and online resources for them to read and maybe become more educated about their lung disease.
We've also promoted lots about how, for people who are considering stopping smoking, this might be a good time. The social circumstances aren't there when you may want to go and have a cigarette. If you're ever contemplating going to consider smoking cessation, maybe this is the right time to do it.
We're trying to work with them on an individual basis, but I would say that, at the end of the day, they're like any one of us. They're nervous. They want life to go back to normal as much as possible, but they've been very compliant with what the Public Health Agency is saying. They're trying to avoid social circumstances that might put them at higher risk. I'm very impressed with some of the responses that I see from my patients.