It's a good question. We haven't seen these patients yet, so I can only hypothesize for you.
I think the typical patient who will meet these rarest of criteria would have to be someone with a very long, documented history of interacting with the health care system. They've had numerous treatment trials and have documented which ones worked, which ones haven't worked and how long they've had each treatment trial. They've likely had a number of hospitalizations. They've likely seen a number of specialists over the years. It would require all of that. It's not just about having that lived experience. It has to be documented in the system before I, as a clinician, could come up with what's called a medical opinion about whether they meet the criterion of incurability or irremediability.
Very unfortunately, there will be patients with that lived experience who either didn't have it documented or weren't seen adequately through the years by our medical system, for a number of different reasons. Without that robust history being documented, they likely will not be found eligible for this care.