I'd actually answer with a structural point, which is that we have the Criminal Code and then we have the colleges of physicians and surgeons and the colleges of nurses. We have practice standards. You should not get into the weeds of the kinds of things like which specialist you need to see as your third person. That's not how the Criminal Code works. It should be in practice standards, and that's what's in those practice standards. It's advice about how you bring up MAID, when you should have to see a consultant and whether the consultant should have to be a psychiatrist. We actually took the position that they shouldn't have to be, because in fact they might be a specialist in something else that's more relevant.
It's a structural response, which is that the safeguards are appropriate in the Criminal Code now. As we build out the protections, they are in the practice standards and then they become clinical protocols.