I think the word is that the quality of life.... I mean, for these patients, for these people, this is the important part. They understand that this is not a cure, but it's an opportunity to relieve some of the symptoms they have and maybe prevent other medical problems from occurring.
So I have a question for Ms. Lee and Mr. Beaudet. There is some talk about.... Dr. Maggisano talked about the evaluating of the technique. What appears to be lacking is testing hypothesis; that's also what he's mentioned.
So here's my question. We were at a time where people were actually getting the procedure in Canada and the testing, so while we're waiting for you to get yourselves organized in order to decide how the research is going to be done for this, there's an opportunity for all of these people to actually have access to a treatment that will provide them with some relief, even if it's just a little bit of relief—whether their feet will no longer be cold, whether they will be able to go to the washroom on their own, anything.... It would be something they don't have right now.
So my question is this: is it not possible? We talk about a blinded study. I don't think we need to be blind about the fact that we saw Mr. Garvie walk in here as opposed to being in his wheelchair.