There is a growing amount of evidence, reports, data and methodologies across various areas that are demonstrating both the advantages in terms of the lived experiences of these people diagnosed with cancer but also the advantages to our system of catching cancer early when it's most treatable and less expensive.
I think that when we look to the United States, their guidelines having changed most recently, it is a good indicator. We have race-based data internationally that we have not previously seen or had access to, and we know that we have a very diverse population in Canada whose needs we need to meet.
Also, I will just mention that there are women of that age group—50 to 74—who currently have access and are not being screened. It's really important that as we consider expanding access, we're not leaving these people further behind and are supporting this expanded access that women should have with resources, whether that's health resources, human resources, technological resources or financial resources, so that we're delivering this in the way that is intended.