Okay.
Well, we have a complementarity between the responses that are insured by the state and supported by the state, and the private responses that are also supported financially by the state. For instance, we have an out-patient clinic in each district capital. We have 18 districts. Each has at least one centre, which has the responsibility to ensure prevention, treatment, harm reduction and reintegration in its territory. If they do not have the capacity to offer the responses needed in this territory, they may establish a contract with NGOs acting locally.
We built quite rapidly a network of responses. I must say that in therapeutic communities, for instance, they are mostly private, NGO-run. The state has only three therapeutic communities, but we have 68 run by NGOs with different models. The state responsibility is to certificate and to support the development of those communities, and then we pay for the services they supply to our patients.