It was a co-signed, fairly large group in the letter.
The nationwide part does refer to something I've alluded to a couple of times, which is that when you're talking about an infectious disease like this, there is science around some of the numbers that can lead to suppression and control. Some of those measures I've already mentioned around how fast the virus moves, how many contacts, the number of cases in a certain area and the ability to spread from person to person.
Therefore, if you have a certain number of cases and a certain type of interaction—distance was one of my pillars—nationwide guidance around areas that have parts of a pandemic that are out of control and suggestions for what to do at that point to limit the distance, increase the awareness or surveillance, and increase the speed of response and engagement, that would make exceptional sense to me.
I guess, in short, what I'm saying is that yes, there are quantitative things that people can fight about till the cows come home in terms of the exact number, but there is very good science around how to contain an epidemic like this. You take those numbers; you go to places that need that guidance and you provide them with the support and the guidelines to be able to do that. I think we need official and national guidance on those items. They don't have to be implemented equally across all regions, but in areas that meet the criteria, those guidelines should be followed or else you are going to see spread of the infection.
This is not a hypothetical; it's a definite, and we know how to fix that.