Just very briefly, yes.
I wanted to comment that I'd like to see everybody kind of step back. We're all dealing with this issue of a shortage of resources and wait list times. We're coming from a different perspective. We'd like to see the resources focused more on health promotion and disease prevention.
There are excellent stats out there, health economic data, that show the health care cost savings that arise from the use of supplements. If you feed pregnant women multivitamins with folic acid, you reduce significantly the risk of neural tube defects. If you have supplements routinely used by elderly populations--calcium and vitamin D, for example--there are huge reductions in hip fractures. If you give lycopene to increase eyesight, there are benefits. There are decreased visits to doctors. There's decreased interdependency. There are huge savings that can be realized from the use of supplements and from giving the power back to consumers before they become patients.