Okay.
I'm going to switch over to something else, something that comes up often, and that's that the infrastructure is non-existent. It's the chicken and the egg: which one comes first?
Mr. Dotto, you were talking about how hospitals are in place in rural areas, and Ms. MacLean, I'm sure you've had a lot of experience. Maybe from the two of you--I believe I'm running probably fairly short on time, so I'll open the question to both of you--how did you see the hospitals develop, and why are they not developing sooner? Does the medication stop or does it help them?
I mean, if we have something that we can use, we want to develop the infrastructure. If we don't have it, we kind of give up hope and walk away. That would be my way of looking at it, or my interpretation of it, but I'll leave that open to the two of you to comment. Maybe just explain to me, first, how infrastructure develops, and second, whether more medication going into a country would help develop that infrastructure.