Absolutely.
Virtual care is absolutely paramount in this. Look, we live in Canada. We know there are health disparities. We know that part of the health disparity includes where you live. If you live in a rural area—like where I'm from, in rural, small-town southern Alberta, and northern Alberta previously—where you have to drive for hours just to see a doctor, virtual care is absolutely a way of closing that gap and making it simple.
Of course, there's working with your pharmacies. When I started treatment, fentanyl came in a green bean that was a “shady 80” or a fake oxycodone 80. It was never anything else. That's when the cookie kind of thing actually made sense. We couldn't get a pharmacist to prescribe suboxone outside of a very specific one. Now you can go to Safeway. You can to Superstore. I'm going to get in trouble for naming companies, but you can go anywhere.