Yes, well, there it is: There should be more access.
We talked about the opioid crisis and how we got here. The reason we got here was the diversion of prescribed opioids. It was the over-prescribing. The people who were being prescribed and taking the medication were never the problem. It was the fact—and this was mentioned—that it was family members and friends, or other reasons people were diverting them. That, then, led to the issues.
We heard about correlation versus causation. The correlation coefficient—which has been published—on the amount of prescribed opioids and death is 0.99. A perfect correlation that can cause causation is 1. We know that the more we prescribe, or the more access there is to a substance that can cause harm, the more danger there is from that substance. This is simple public health knowledge. Anybody who works in this area knows this. That is why a lot of my colleagues are up in arms. It's not about the molecule. It's about the fact that we're not taking the time to prevent that molecule from being diverted and being harmful.