My ideal thing would be that I would set up clinics apart from the hospital, generally out in the woods somewhere. In fact, we have drawings of the ideal building, where they seat how many, who's there, whether it's the psychiatrist or psychologist, and generally there are three or four in the building at one time. I have all of that stuff.
We had plans in the U.S. for all of that stuff. All of that stuff could be done here, and that's why I get a little excited when I wonder if I'm going to hear this thing 15 years—and I won't be alive in 15 years, by the way—this same thing over and over again that we're going to go through. As I say, education is great. You need it, but you have to do both ends of it.
The early intervention is the key to success. You've probably heard that a million times, and that's important, and that's what you're doing, and that's what you're providing. But, then, when the patients get ill, they don't want to send them to the U.S., and they can't do it here and you realize.... But Dr. Paul Garfinkel told me that $4.5 million worth of funds went to the U.S. out of Ontario in one year.