Going back to the example of legal advice, if you don't want to provide legal advice or take on a client, Mr. Bittle, you indicated that within the legal profession we can and should refer them to somebody else, but this is something very different here. These are people who have conscientious objections to what is going on, and we've already included, directly or indirectly, a person's ability on the grounds of conscience not to have to participate in this.
It is a reasonable expansion of that to say you're not under an obligation to have to refer a patient to somebody who is going to do that for them. If on conscience grounds the individual does not want to get involved with this, they don't have to go the next step of getting the kind of assistance that the patient is looking for. This is just a reasonable expansion of what's already part of this.