Sure. In the case of Alberta, only about 5% of fatal overdoses have prescribed opioids implicated in them.
I will echo what I said earlier around supervised consumption sites. We have worked with the chief coroner's office of Ontario to map overdose mortality across the city of Toronto year over year. What we found was pretty remarkable. Up to five kilometres away, we saw about a two-thirds reduction in the rate of overdose mortality across neighbourhoods. We're trying to figure out why that is, because that's a really powerful effect.
We think that beyond people's access to these programs on site, they are also hubs of harm reduction services. These are places where people feel safe, where they can pick up naloxone and where they are provided with safer education about how to avoid overdoses. That's really critical.