Right. You're really asking a health question. I'll address concerns with this self-care framework. However, when you have.... You know, some figures are that upwards to 80% of Canadians are regularly using these products, but low-income people cannot afford them. Low-income people.... You know, if you go to a naturopathic doctor or a traditional Chinese practitioner, you're not able to afford these, so you've basically lost a fundamental right to decide how you're going to treat yourself when you're ill. We're going into legal, philosophical problems. However, this self-care framework is going to make the regulation of natural health products prohibitive, so even just on cost recovery itself, which has already been gazetted.... Health Canada had a large Zoom meeting with the industry. Even with the new figures that are given—and we all know that the goal is full harmonization—there are players out there that are saying that they're not going to do business in Canada anymore. Almost every manufacturer will be reducing its line, and—this is very scary—with regard to cost recovery alone, we're going to lose the suppliers for the traditional Chinese practitioners who literally need thousands of products for a full scope of practice...and also homeopathic medicine. What's going to happen to the natural health community when we lose two major healing traditions within that community and have the rundown affects on the distributors and stores?
Let's not even forget, I mean, the self-care framework. Health Canada is publicly telling us that you're not even going to be able to get licensed for any product for which you'd seek the advice of a health care practitioner, like a naturopathic doctor or a TCM doctor, so now we're in a licensing scheme under, you know, C.08.001 of the drug regulations.