I wanted to ask you about that as well. I wanted to ask you how much control you have over the blueprint of the records and how much the provinces have, because in just four provinces you identified 2.5 million dangerous drug reactions. They call it significant; I know it's dangerous. We know that doctors only report 1% of adverse drug reactions to Health Canada, so they're basically flying in the dark. Prescription drugs taken the right way, without error, are the fourth leading cause of death in Canada.
I wanted to ask you about a drug that's on the market right now that increases the risk of suicide for young people by eight times over placebo, which is Paxil. One out of fifty young people who take Paxil will think about killing themselves, and some of them will carry it out. On June 7, in Toronto, there will be an inquest into the death of Sara Carlin, who did exactly that. We know that GlaxoSmithKline paid a $2.4 million fine in New York state related to the cover-up of the risk of suicide with Paxil and underwent a four-year criminal investigation in the U.K. for the same reason.
So here's my question. Could you search the e-records and discover how many people who committed suicide in Canada were either on Paxil or withdrawing from Paxil at the time of their death?