Thank you for that question, honourable member.
There's a process in place in Canada that has been in place for 10 years, which the provinces have implemented. It is called, as you are aware, the pan-Canadian pharmaceutical alliance. Boehringer Ingelheim was the first company that went through the successful negotiation on the pCPA process for a stroke prevention drug, the first drug in 50 years that demonstrated improving stroke outcomes. We built the negotiation framework with the provinces. That demonstrates our commitment to ensuring Canadians' access. Subsequent, to that, we've been through 17 successful negotiations.
Paramount, honourable member, is that there is a process in place, which has been in place for over 10 years now, that falls under the provincial jurisdiction of pricing negotiation. It has worked really well and has led to Canadians' receiving access to innovative treatments. The federal government has joined the pan-Canadian negotiation, as they see how effective it is. The substance, then, is that there is a process in place in Canada. What is being proposed by PMPRB oversteps, respectfully, its jurisdictional boundaries as a patent abuse regulator and circumvents the provincial jurisdiction of price negotiation, which has been demonstrated to be very effective.