I think here's the difficulty. One could construct a study where you take all of those people who might be eligible for MAID for mental illness and provide them with really excellent care, provide them with whatever they might need—psychotherapy, adequate pharmacotherapy, a nutritional program, exercise, access to neurostimulation, other psychosocial interventions that might help—and you could look and see what proportion of those patients actually change from appearing irremediable to remediable. I think many of us are concerned that it's probably a very large proportion of them.
The concern there is that psychiatrists don't know that because we don't have the research. There's no evidence for it, so you could have a patient and a psychiatrist sit together and earnestly decide there's nothing that can be done, that this case is irremediable, and both have that entirely wrong, and then have that person end their life. As a practitioner or clinician or psychiatrist, the idea that we might go forward with that without informing patients that this is a possibility is a problem. At the moment—