That's an excellent question, MP O'Connell. Maybe I can start and, Dave, you can add.
There are a number of countries—I'm thinking specifically of Sweden, Denmark, Finland, the U.K., New Zealand—that have parts of these nationwide diabetes approaches and are experiencing much better rates of prevalence and lower costs than we are as a result. In fact, Canada is in the worst third of OECD countries for prevalence and cost of treating diabetes, largely because we haven't had such an approach. Even countries such as Portugal and India have more coordinated approaches and better experiences of diabetes according to many metrics than Canada does.
As I mentioned in my earlier remarks, it's a recommendation of the World Health Organization that every country have a nationwide approach, and it's one that I think Canada should seriously heed.