Yes, and the difficulty with clients is this. Let's say you're a client, for example, for a filling. It's not something that on a day-to-day basis you wake up and ask, “What exactly is the new policy and what should I or do I have access to?” We need to find a way to make sure they know this and have access to it, especially when they need to know it. It's hard, because access to dental care is not something that people think about on a daily basis.
We're working with first nations and Inuit communities and organizations in trying to find ways to ensure that we actually reach out to and communicate to our partners and the clients. We're talking about a potential 853,000 clients at the moment, dispersed across the country, on and off reserve, so it's a vast population. For us, it means that we've been working with communities, the primary health care centres that exist in the communities, and the health professionals, and also, of course, potentially working with social media to make sure that clients have access to the most information perspectives possible. We also have newsletters that inform people about what we're doing, and that's something that we are looking at improving.
I don't know, Dr. Plante, if you want to add something on this.