It's not so much that we should do the screening as we should do the testing.
One of the most important things, I believe, is that the current policy in Ontario and in most provinces is that we do genetic testing once a woman has developed breast or ovarian cancer. By that time, I think it's a little late.
I set up a program at the Women's College Hospital—the only one in the world—where we make genetic testing available to every woman in Canada from the age of 18 on a pay-per-service basis. We've done several thousand. The premise is that, if we find them before they have cancer, then we can offer them special screening.
In the high-risk women, we do offer MRIs. It's covered by the Ontario government, OBSP. We offer preventive surgery. We offer mammography as well.