Yes, absolutely. The obvious one is breast imaging. Over the course of the pandemic, as I said, we had 300,000 women who decided not to get screened. That will have an impact on future breast cancer mortality.
The other thing we saw was more complex. What we were seeing was people not going to the emergency room, despite having illnesses. Somebody who would normally come to the emergency room with some right lower quadrant pain was holding out, and by the time they got to the emergency room, a week later than they should have, they had a ruptured appendix. It goes on and on and on. We were seeing many more late-stage cancers because people were just letting it grumble at home.
A two-year period is a very long period to sit on any pathology. You have to then take that forward. If we have a nine-month wait-list for MRIs, that's an additional wait for people who have already delayed their treatment and their diagnosis. This will have a knock-on effect, to be certain.