As I said earlier, I do see the end-of-life strategy as part of aging and seniors and how critical it is to stop fooling ourselves. Not only are we going to need more supports, but we all eventually will die, and it's very costly to die in a hospital. Nobody wants to die in a hospital, so end-of-life care has to be incorporated in that.
The other piece I'll quickly add, which I didn't mention and is the elephant in the room, is about medical assistance in dying. One of the things we've been advocating strongly for is that although that is a human right and it's legal for people, it's not part of the hospice care philosophy, and if we're making that available to people, we have to make quality hospice palliative care available to people, too. It's not an either-or, and that's always a concern when there is funding and strategies around medical assistance in dying.