I'd be delighted. Thank you very much.
I'm a volunteer. There are a lot of patient organizations where the office is a desk in somebody's bedroom. That applies to our little PKU group. It's a very big deal to try to engage with PMPRB—I'll use them as one example but it's not the only one—in order to understand their processes and understand the appropriate opportunities, or lack of them, for the patient voice, the unique perspective of patients as the users of prescription drugs, to engage in the process. I think there's a lot of opportunity for improvement of that in the PMPRB and its processes.
There are other aspects of the health care system. The initial regulatory review by Health Canada for safety and efficacy and quality of manufacturing is very time-consuming. Then there's the other phase, the health technology assessment process. There is a window of opportunity now for patients, individuals and groups to make submissions into that. That's a huge burden of effort for many volunteers in many of the smaller patient organizations. It would be very helpful and I think it would improve the quality of the process and protect the integrity of each of those processes—the price review process, the safety efficacy review process and the health technology assessment process—if the patient voice were strengthened.