This goes to my point earlier.
I agree that a number of patients—in fact, many patients—will have a long history of prior psychiatric treatment. The question for individual MAID assessors is knowing whether or not they will truly not recover. That is what it means to meet the irremediability requirement.
When we look at the evidence in the literature and the trials that have looked at [Technical difficulty—Editor] with a set of patients who all meet those requirements of serious disease at the onset, and again, as I said earlier, that correlated in a way with their prognosis: The majority of these cases got better and a significant minority did not, so that is true.
The question is, how can we be sure? What kind of prognosis certainty do we have? As I said earlier, as things stand, we are close to chance level.