That's an excellent question, and there are three dimensions of it that I'd like to address.
First, I think we're much closer today to having immune measures that are what we call correlates of protection. Not to go into detail, but anybody who has gone into the depths of immunology will know that there's nothing simple here: It's a very complex immune system we all have. Therefore, generalizing with unified measures across immune systems has taken a lot of work. However, there's been tremendous progress over the last year, and I believe we're much closer to having accepted measures of correlates of protection. These are biological measures of immunity that will allow us to understand how protected we are after vaccines or natural infection. That's inclusive of variants.
The second part of this is the variants of concern that have recently emerged. We're actively working with the variants network that Canada has set up to understand the interfaces between vaccines and immunity. We're getting data on that, and at the moment the initial evidence suggests that the vaccines are perhaps more robust than we would have expected in the context of the variants.
The last point is about public health vigilance and behaviours. I think we may see an opportunity to dial those back when we get 50% to 60% of Canadians vaccinated. However, before that time, we really have to continue to promote adherence to public health measures, which we know make a difference.