Thank you to all of the witnesses for coming this evening.
My first question will be to you, Mr. Emberley.
We've heard today in testimony that in the case of self-administration, the moment of prescription of a medication that a patient may take at home is when the medical assistance in dying is provided.
The question I have for you is whether you think pharmacists are capable of making the capacity assessment required to accept that the patient's consent at that moment is valid. The witnesses said today that it could be a pharmacist who gives some medication months and months earlier to a patient, who might have it in her closet for a long time and then finally take it, but the last person who has to assess whether she's in fact giving express consent would, of course, be the pharmacist.
Are your members trained to make that kind of capacity judgment?