Yet, although 80 per cent of the vulnerable have received the vaccines, that still leaves you with a million or two among that vulnerable group who, for a variety of reasons, usually vaccine hesitancy, stay unvaccinated. So you are not going to contain the circulation of the virus to just within the young, less vulnerable group. And as we have discovered from India, even if 1 per cent of that young group ends up needing hospitalisation, that could overwhelm your system, because the absolute numbers are so great. So the intention is that you keep an eye on hospitalisations and deaths, not just on infection rates. If the infection rate climbs, so be it. If the other two are manageable, we continue on our roadmap of lifting restrictions. Obviously, there’s a risk that come June 30, when all restrictions are lifted, we have a situation like in Australia and New Zealand—where they are all walking around without masks—and there might be a sudden increase in the rate of infection. They have done some modelling on that. That could lead to a surge by August, which could require an expansion of healthcare capacity, which is where surge planning is happening. By designating certain hospitals that will shut down all their other activities, and just take Covid. And the other hospitals will soak up the non-Covid activity that that hospital was meant to do.