That's probably a 10-hour conversation. I will try to narrow it as much as possible and focus first on the public health measures you have suggested.
I think one thing we haven't done well in Canada in particular is to take on a national or pan-Canadian strategy. Instead, we have a mixture of strategies. The territories and the Atlantic provinces have taken a maximum suppression approach. That has unquestionably saved lives, and it doesn't appear to have substantially harmed their economy, whereas all of the other provinces have taken a pure mitigation approach. How do you get there? I don't think there's any question of how you get to a maximum suppression strategy. The Atlantic provinces and the territories have demonstrated how to do that. That includes tight controls on the movement of people and travel, aggressive testing, contact tracing, isolating and supporting those who need help in all those aspects.
It's a very data-driven approach that targets zero, even though you may not actually achieve zero. I think as a national strategy, if there were to be a national strategy, then all the things that would be included in those would be necessary.
It looks like I don't have time to answer on the drugs.