I described a little bit before in a French reply.
The safeguards that are commonly referred to and that are also described in my report are the way in which we evaluate decisional capacity, mindful of some of the concerns that Dr. Montes has raised, to make sure that those are all properly assessed and evaluated.
I think the other big one that is commonly looked at and is in place as well in the Netherlands and Belgium is the situations under which parental corroboration might also be needed.
I'd also like to highlight that in the cases I've been involved in involving minors, in which there were questions about MAID, these were very different from situations in which a minor might be seeking contraception. When we're looking at life-limiting illness, it's very, very uncommon that we're speaking only with the minor. They have significant care requirements, and my experience has usually been that it's the parents who've actually sought the possibility of MAID for their minors. As I said to Mr. Thériault before, it's very uncommon in those kinds of situations that the minor is asking for their life to end, for treatment to be stopped so that they would end where there's a categorical objection on the part of the parents.