Thank you, Mr. Cooper, for your question. It's a very good question and a very important question. The reconciliation of those two points is the following.
Certainly psychological suffering is a factor that can be part of a larger set of factors that would potentially qualify a person for medical assistance in dying. What we have done is to say that mental illness can't be the sole criterion at this stage. We need to study that further. As I mentioned in my opening remarks, there isn't consensus, and it's a very deeply felt fear in the experts to whom we have spoken in the medical community and in the CCA report as well. We still need to know more.
In terms of being a sole criterion, it can be a factor with other criteria present. That's the specific reconciliation of the point you bring up.