There's only one, and that is the country of Colombia, which I mentioned in my opening remarks. In early 2015, the government promulgated a resolution to guide the practice of physician-assisted dying. What they foresee in that regulation is that there would be an interdisciplinary committee that would review the patient's request, and it would not just review the request but would almost have carriage of the patient's request and their file through the rest of the process.
The patient would make the request to their physician, and the physician would then notify an interdisciplinary committee, which has on it a lawyer, a physician, and also, I believe, a mental health expert. The committee would be part of the hospital administration. That committee would take over the patient's case and would work with the patient and the patient's family to give them the support they need to ensure that palliative care is offered. They would accompany the patient, basically, right through to the end of the process. It is the independent body—not the physician administering it—that would be ensuring that all of the conditions had been satisfied beforehand.