You may well be right, but I can tell you that it's not acceptable; we will not condone it, and we'll try to, as I said, by working with the professional associations and colleges, impress upon these groups the importance that patients are seen and are treated. The only thing I can tell you is that the working group—as I said, most of them were actually physicians—said they would never refuse to see patients, and a lot of their patients had actually undergone treatment abroad. But it's an issue. We don't accept it. We have to try to change that, and there's a message that must be sent.
The other thing is the composition of the August working group. I don't really want to go back to that, but since you bring it up again, our criterion was very simple. We invited physician scientists that were funded either by CIHR or by the U.S. NIH. That was simple, clear. They're all—