I think that in Taiwan's case, the general public and the government, we have a consensus that.... Of course, we had a hard lesson. We learned a hard lesson from the SARS in 2003. We are isolated from the international health community, so we believed that we had to respond quickly, based on the scientific evidence and the expert advice.
We did not necessarily have a drill, but we had the legal framework already in place after SARS in 2003. That's the reason we could quickly establish the CECC and mobilize the private sector and government agencies to work together as a team, and then respond properly and quickly.
Also, the democracy.... I think people are certainly worried about a loss of...even a very timid one. They worry about the loss of security and safety in this pandemic. I think that's the reason the government can get the trust of the people. You have to be open and transparent, with lots of communication. That would certainly give the government more power to proceed with the mechanism that is required.