The WHO did call this a pandemic today, but the key message is that all countries can still change the course of this pandemic by doing a number of things. I will go through them very quickly, but I believe we're already doing them.
First of all, they are asking countries to be prepared and ready, and we have been preparing since the beginning of this.
Second is to detect and then to protect the population, and to treat if necessary. I think the detection is very important. We have been setting up surveillance systems and laboratory testing since the start.
Third is to reduce transmission—maybe I will pause on that for a minute to talk about the mass gatherings—to innovate and to learn.
With regard to reducing the transmission, there's now this hashtag, which is #FlattenTheCurve. You don't want a pandemic to look like this, where it's inundating your health system. You want to flatten it and reduce transmission so that it goes down to a level where your health system can actually cope. This is where the individual case identifications that our provinces are doing right now are very important. They're identifying the cases, their contacts, putting them into isolation—