I think my colleague Dr. Hurd raised the point about the urgency. We need to see this as a very urgent issue and mobilize as much research as we can, making it a priority area, which Health Canada has done to some degree and CIHR has done to some degree. I think it's an issue of immense urgency. We can't continue to practice with anecdotes for such a serious issue. It is an area of urgency for medical education. My colleague Didier.... I didn't get his surname, or I don't recall it; my apologies.
I think the urgency with which this should be treated should have all the same regard as medicine, i.e., can we dose it and all the rest? It's urgent. We can't wait and wait. There's human suffering here. The research needs to drive it really quickly. People are keen. There are lots of clinicians, researchers, biomedical scientists, geneticists and neuroscientists. In fact, I sometimes say, loosely, that the “green rush” had it on us: We woke up and they had gone. The research that has gone into plant development and so on, it's gone way faster than the medical profession. We're playing catch-up.