Thank you. I appreciate that.
When we hear about guidelines that are basically suggesting they are against self-screening, that's a concern to me, especially in rural areas—not just rural but urban as well—where there are concerns that you can't access a practitioner to even get that done. At least the self-screening would provide some form of understanding. I think that's information women need to understand. They need to be prepared to learn how to do it and do it, so that they at least understand when they need to see that practitioner.
On that note, the concern I have, having been a regulator in the profession and having dealt with things, is that there is a difference between guidelines and standards. When we talk about guidelines that are presented, where practitioners see those guidelines, they don't necessarily look at it the same way as they might look at standards. I'm just wondering about comments you might have that maybe these things should go even further than guidelines and become standards.