Thank you very much for your question.
We are ready to resume all acute care immediately, just as for a heart attack that must be treated right away. It's possible to resume treatment today, if patients come in when they are in crisis. For chronic problems, for procedures such as non-acute angioplasties, valves and defibrillators, unfortunately, there was a fairly long waiting list, even before the COVID-19 crisis. I don't know exactly how long it will take because we still don't know when we'll be able to resume treatment. In fact, we'll probably resume elective procedures very slowly. However, “elective” doesn't mean that we can wait years to perform these kinds of procedures because, unfortunately, there are deaths among patients who are on a waiting list.
It depends a bit on when we can do more elective procedures than we did before the COVID-19 crisis. Otherwise, since we were already working at full capacity before the crisis, I admit that I don't know how we'll be able to add patients who haven't received care for one, two or three months. At the very least, we'll have to increase the number of procedures we perform by a few percentage points, which will take months or maybe even years.