I think, again, that's in my mind another.... I'm not saying it's not challenging and more challenging to go into a market where you don't have the same types of processes and systems in place as we have in developed countries, but as I said earlier, it's not short of a miracle to think of what people said could not be done. They said that 400,000 was about the max that we could get people onto therapy, because of all of these things that were not in place. The reality is we have 5.2 million people, and we have clinics all over, all across the map.
If you look in Tanzania, where there were two sites available, one in Dar es Salaam and one in Moshi, where you could be treated for HIV in 2002, you now have over 60 sites by 2010. We could not have done that in our own country. By being able to get the drugs to people, to get drugs into the country and to transport those medications to all those sites, some of which are in rural isolated areas, we have been able to show and demonstrate that it's possible to get drugs to people and to get people on drugs.
We may have a model of care in this country that says a prescription needs to be done by a physician, but treatment algorithms have been developed for developing countries that allow all kinds of health care providers to be able to follow simple algorithms of treatment so that we have the necessary people who have been trained throughout and over the last eight years to be able to do that. So it's not an argument for me.