I think what you're asking is actually an extremely complicated question. I don't think there's an easy answer here.
I do think that the health care leaders, such as you have here today, and the health care physicians and nurses are the best ones to try to prioritize what is really important and what is falling behind compared to others.
We get into this discussion all the time. The best one I can give you is you have two patients who are waiting for emergency surgery, and it's up to the surgeons to decide between a neurosurgeon and a cardiac surgeon who's patient needs to go first.
You're talking about very different things. There are universal measures of health care and of well-being. I suppose that's one way of doing this, but to try to compare one group of illnesses to another one is extremely hard to do. The problem is that they are all important. There are ways of looking at what are the impacts to these patients both in the short term and the long term. There are measures out there. I'm not an expert on them. That is one way trying to get at what really is the biggest problem.