That's what I'm trying to get at.
Exclusion criteria, people need to be able.... This is a time when we have Google. This is a time when we have the ability to communicate electronically with health professionals, to collaborate and be able to come together to figure out solutions to problems. Instead, we complain that there's too much information and people don't bother to look it up.
I was at a point—and I want to talk about this, because this comes to the point where I talk about complications. The lab couldn't find a vein. They couldn't draw samples, so they refused to come up. What happens when somebody's requesting euthanasia? They couldn't come up. Nobody could insert a trach, because anatomically it wasn't a long enough space. I was intubated and I was awake for two weeks until there was enough air space so I could be intubated. There are many things like this. I couldn't get brain injury rehab early in my illness because I have a mental illness. There are many exclusions that happen. Those exclusion criteria have to be stopped. There are unrealistic recommendations all through this: that oh, the family doctor, you're going to have this conversation, and he's going to hold your hand all the way through, blah, blah, blah. No. I've had my family doctor since 1989. I've probably had 10 or 15 doctors, because you have an intensivist, and you have a hospitalist, and now there are rehab doctors. There have been different doctors all the way through this. So the vision—