I don't think we could answer that question exactly. In the Health Check program, to qualify for Health Check and meet the criteria, you have to qualify based on CFIA's reference amount, as well as your labelled serving size. If you were to have a very large serving size, you wouldn't be able to meet our criteria. To some extent, then, we're controlling the serving size that is recommended on the nutrition facts table, and that is certainly going to help in terms of consumption.
In terms of childhood obesity, it's a much more complicated issue than a label program. Certainly healthy eating is going to help in terms of childhood obesity. If children choose healthier products, which they're going to be able to do easily by choosing products with a label that has evaluated the total product to make sure it is part of healthy eating, that is certainly going to be a very positive factor.