Yes. I think the Alberta model has been highly successful. They are starting thousands of people in the same day on opioid agonist treatment, and that includes people in remote communities, people who have attended emergency departments or hospitals, and this is the way to do it.
Canada has such dispersed, geographically distant communities and we need to get OAT to where people are in their communities—in the hospital, in the emergency departments—and virtual care is an efficient way to do it. They have 24-7 services. I understand it's not just virtual care; they have connections to prescribers, nurse practitioners and physicians as well as to pharmacies, so I think it's a very good model to make sure that people in remote communities and people who lack transportation, and who are in hospitals and emergency departments, have access to care.