 Thank you Mr. Speaker, I wish to thank honourable members for their support, but Mr. Speaker I think it's incumbent upon me to just respond very quickly. The member for Chuzel indicated that there seem to be a problem with people not receiving service if they have not paid. I know that the hospital is trying very hard Mr. Speaker to recover some funds and I am not aware of anyone being turned away especially in emergency cases. I know that the hospital deals with all emergency cases and I am aware that the hospital is trying very hard to make arrangements, payment plans and so on with people. But I will still find out, based on what the member said, the whole issue of getting death certificates, I will pursue that also, but I am not aware of this situation. I know there have been one or two complaints from some people who have access healthcare services in certain institutions there in St. Lucia in relation to the death certificates. But we have investigated and we have resolved those matters. I believe also Mr. Speaker that the member for Mikusov, a leader of the opposition, spoke to the whole issue of the amount of money. How are we going to finance healthcare? That $19 million to St. Jude Hospital obviously is a drop in the bucket and I agree. This government agrees that we need to increase resources based on the evidence, based on the information which has come to me. There is also a role for management and proper management and responsible management Mr. Speaker. And we are trying very hard both at the Millennium Ice Medical Complex at the level of the board. We have a new CEO now in the person of Dr. Dexter James and they are trying very hard to work out the management issues and to become very efficient. I know the St. Jude Board is doing the same and they have presented their plans and so on. So that is working. Let me just answer finally the member for Mikusov who spoke about funding mechanism. He said we call ours universal healthcare. He calls his health insurance. What I can say to the member for Mikusov is this government is working diligently with the professionals to ensure that we present to the people of St. Lucia a plan for the funding of healthcare. I can tell you that we are advanced in our discussions. I can also tell you that the Minister for Finance and Prime Minister is at the heart of these discussions and we are going to also benefit from the World Bank project. There is an ongoing project which deals with financing of healthcare. It is difficult, it is challenging. All governments have faced this challenge. How are we going to finance healthcare? How are we going to do it? Paho WHO recommends Mr. Speaker that at least we should have 6.6% of our GDP going to financing healthcare. I think we are about 4.7% at this stage. So there is a gap, a financing gap for healthcare. But we must also accept that to close that financing gap, the department of health, the healthcare sector in general must come together with a credible way forward. A credible plan which can be presented to parliament, presented to honorable members, presented to the cabinet so that we can know exactly where the money is going to, exactly what we are funding and how we are funding healthcare moving forward. But there are other things which must be done. The members spoke about health insurance and he tries to say there is a difference between health insurance and the Labour Party is talking about universal healthcare. In all of the literature Mr. Speaker, it is universal health we are talking about. You can fund universal health via an insurance mechanism but the goal is universal healthcare. That is the goal. Using one health as the broader environment where you have animal health, our health environment and so on. But the goal is universal healthcare. And we are not to wait for the financing mechanism to begin the process of implementing universal healthcare. I have said before Mr. Speaker that what I am trying to propose and what we are working on as a ministry is to demystify what universal healthcare is. First of all, it is access. You need to provide greater access to people, greater access to quality healthcare. You need to do it in a way which reduces out-of-pocket costs and you need to have equity. So as a ministry, just to respond to the member for MikuSouth, we are working very hard to increase access. So that is why we are doing centers of excellence. At the Miku Center of Excellence for NCDs, you can go and find out from the nurses and the administrators, we have increased access to specialist services at Miku. We have increased access. So we are already working on implementing universal healthcare and we will present the other plans very soon. So I agree with the member for view for itself obviously that we are trying very hard to stick to the Public Finance Management Act and we are hoping that this amendment will satisfy that. Thank you Mr. Speaker.