I should have laid them out more clearly, I suppose.
As I just mentioned, number one on my top priority list would be to ensure that physicians and nurse practitioners who are going to be engaged in medically assisted dying receive appropriate training and—if I am so bold—mandatory training. This is a very sensitive issue. I don't know how well received it will be in many communities, if it will be well received at all.
Because it is, as you said, something that is inevitable, and there is going to be a framework, I think you have the ability to at least create some safety around it. That is really what we are talking about here, patient safety. In doing that, I think it is important to create a framework that allows for patient safety, and that is for sure a cultural safety training that I think should be required for physicians and clinicians.
I am also worried about the communication piece. I have wrestled with how you could come up with a communication dialogue piece for communities—because I think there is going to be a lot of confusion around this—and some clear and plain language so that communities understand what the implications of this are, and some engagement around this. I think the engagement piece could really happen, as I mentioned, through the support of aboriginal navigators. I don't know if that happens in partnership with the cultural safety training and with physicians, but I think it is important to support those ideas.