That's a very important question. I would point out that when we've done surveys of the membership in the CMA, somewhere around 30% of physicians have said that if this becomes legal they would be willing to participate. That may sound, on the face of it, low; it's actually not. That equates to tens of thousands of physicians. In Oregon, it's less than 0.6% of physicians who participate in assisted dying. In terms of the numbers alone, access won't be a problem. The problem is connecting patients who qualify with willing practitioners.
You can imagine that most physicians aren't willing to put their names out there to advertise that they're going to be participating in this; there are security and safety concerns. What we need, and what the CMA has been calling for, is a system to help connect patients who qualify for assisted dying with practitioners who are willing to provide the service. At the same time this means the physicians who don't want to participate, or don't want to refer, can have their conscience rights protected. It's a way to satisfy both situations.