Presumably you would go to the hospital if you had a really serious problem, and then the hospital would take care of that.
But I think you raised a really important thing in that we don't know what to do. The public doesn't know what to do.
There are many times that things are going on that we don't even know about. All of you here have probably taken ibuprofen. Do you know that after one dose of ibuprofen your stomach bleeds? One dose. You don't see that, so you don't even know that it's going on. Some people think, “I can just get this medicine over the counter, therefore I can take a couple more, and I'll give it to my kids.” We're not even aware of things that are going on inside of us, what it's doing to our cardiovascular system and all those things.
We don't know when we take a medicine whether it's taking it or whether it's interaction. If we had a public education awareness campaign to tell people what they can do and the infrastructure to manage that, I think that's the biggest challenge that we have here and this committee has. Where is the infrastructure going to come from that's going to manage all those reports?