At the moment, I am always pleased to say, particularly to the children of people with Alzheimer's disease, that receiving a diagnosis of Alzheimer is does not mean your car is going to be taken away the next morning. That is absolutely not the case. In fact, the time has to be chosen with the family. I always say that the family has to be involved. Otherwise, we contact the people responsible for managing their finances, the lawyer, the notary, and so on. At that point, the people affected still have completely informed positions and judgments. Obviously, we cannot wait until the moderate phase to do that kind of document, so it is done at the point when it s still possible to understand the situation clearly.
On the question of activating the consent, I always have the feeling that people have gone before us. I am thinking of Holland and Belgium, that have been working on this since 2005. The Netherlands Supreme Court delivered a judgment recently, in 2021, in response to a clarification by the Royal Dutch Medical Association concerning what the ideal solution should be. There is a lot of experience and expertise there and I would put measures in place that are more or less the same as what is being done there. There is no point in reinventing the wheel in the purely Canadian context.