Thank you for the question.
As I said, we need to make this a priority and build a bit on the models we use to treat chronic diseases. Opioid dependence is obviously much more complex, but the models for organizing services and training professionals to treat chronic diseases, such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease, are very pertinent, in my opinion.
As I said in my presentation, we're starting from a long way off. Among the easiest measures to put in place, first of all, we could make addiction training compulsory in all medical faculties, not only for doctors, but also for pharmacists, nurses and people who accompany patients on a psychosocial level. So training health care professionals is the first thing to do.
The second thing to do concerns ethical responsibility. If I take you into the emergency room when you're having a heart attack and all I do is give you an electric shock and send you home without medication, without management and without follow-up, I'm going to lose my licence to practice. We know what works for opioid addiction. When a patient presents to the emergency department because of an overdose, we can no longer simply give him naloxone and discharge him. Patients must be offered treatment immediately. There must be addiction specialists in hospitals who can advise doctors, teams, even patients, and then ensure proper follow-up—