Thanks. That's a great question.
There are a few things under way. The federal government is consulting to try to develop something of an actual strategy around rare diseases. Canada has lacked that to date. I think that's very promising. There's funding for the medicines when patients need them, but there are also the various mechanisms that need to be put in place for the assessment of medicines as they come to market, and to support both manufacturers and patients in navigating often complex and uncertain information about whether the medicines are going to work or not.
The $500 million that's dedicated towards helping provinces pay for expensive drugs for rare diseases is an important step in the process of developing a truly comprehensive national pharmacare program. For patients with rare diseases, I think it's a clear signal that they will not be left behind by a pharmacare program that is designed to cover all of the medicines Canadians need. I know there was a lot of fear at the outset of discussions about national pharmacare that patients with rare diseases would become the second or third in line after the patients with more common conditions like diabetes, asthma and other such things.