I think it's something that, again, is really case-specific. There will be cases, I would argue, where it's pretty obvious that a 17-and-a-half-year-old, to use an example, would be fully able to understand and have the capacity to consent to a MAID procedure.
At the same time, there may be considerations of minors who have mental health issues that overlay a life-limiting condition and a number of different pieces where that capacity may be a little more difficult to sort out. In those cases, I would say that the network of practice that I talked about before—where MAID providers don't exist in a vacuum and there is access to different resources and to different providers who can help shed some light on what's going on for an individual patient at an individual time—would be really helpful.
I take issue, from an equity standpoint, with a blanket statement about age, condition or other sorts of things. I think it's a really complicated situation and incredibly person-specific.