Thank you very much for that question. We did actually explore that a little bit with our membership. We did not do it in a very granular way, but when we asked them what their level of support would be overall, we came up with a number of around 30%.
Once we start to add in some additional factors—for example, if the pain and suffering is purely psychological versus physical as well—the support drops. Once we add in a non-terminal versus a terminal illness, the support drops again. You can see that physicians' level of discomfort will increase as we add in more of these variables. We didn't use things like age or the possibility of using advance directives as variables specifically, but in the conversations we've had with our colleagues, there's a lot of discomfort around those areas as well.
Our starting point for a lot of the discussions was the Carter decision as we interpreted it, which is not what some people are calling “Carter plus” but more the floor than the ceiling, I think. The more variables you add in, the more difficult health care providers find those scenarios, the lower the support becomes, and the lower the percentage of providers willing to step forward and provide assisted dying becomes.