Thank you.
I appreciate that, because I know a 16-year-old boy who was the victim of a hit and run. He went head-first through the front windshield of a vehicle and had brain matter draining out of his left ear. He's deaf in his left ear, had multiple broken bones, multiple injuries to his face, etc., and he definitely had concerns many times in his life about where that could take him.
This happened to me. I'm that boy. It happened 50 years ago this May. Fortunately, many people helped out along those lines, ultimately.
I want to talk to Ms. Hudspith.
You talked about the pain task force. Fortunately, through my career, I put myself through education and sports to get myself to where I am today. In the time I spent at the Royal University Hospital in Saskatoon, I was with Professor Emeritus Gordon Wyant. He was an anaesthesiologist who started the pain clinic at the University of Saskatchewan. One of the things he talked about was exactly what you pointed out, the three things: pharma, psychology and physical and all those aspects of it.
I'm wondering whether you could comment a bit more on that.