In fact, relative to the Health Canada decision, it's about two years. However, the impact of that delay leads to delays of up to seven to nine years nationally, simply because manufacturers have no incentive to initiate the switch in Canada because of the inability to do a national launch.
The impact I would want to underline on that is also the impact on employment. While you have that delay, which is a period over which time provinces continue to pay for unnecessary doctor visits, the other thing that it does is....
Ours is a global industry. When a product is being considered for switch to be made into a consumer health product, that company basically has an internal competition for who will get the mandate to manufacture and export it across the globe. You're not going to be at the table in that competition if you're not even bringing the product to market in a timely way.
What we see is that our share of the manufacturing in that growth area is very much adversely affected. There are jobs that can be found this way.