Yes. The files and the conditions being dealt with are more complex from a medical point of view. I think I alluded to that earlier. From the board's perspective, ultimately, on a mid-term basis, I would say that within the next few years, the board will progress and change because of the change in the nature of cases. It will move from a high-volume system to a high-quality system eventually. The files and the subjects being dealt with will require a lot more attention, a lot more expertise from an evidentiary point of view. So you should notice that eventually the board will evolve that way.
So instead of rendering the possibility of 7,000 or 8,000 decisions a year, it may go down to 2,000 or 3,000, or possibly 4,000 decisions a year, but each of those decisions may require a lot more time, effort, and energy in the evidentiary side of the issue.