I'm going to ask Dr. Turner to respond to you, but I just wanted to say there are a number of issues related to mandatory reporting by health care professionals. In reporting adverse reactions, and particularly serious adverse reactions, it's more of an issue of quality rather than quantity, because you want to focus on the very serious areas. This is what I'm talking about in terms of targeting oversight on areas of greatest risk.
Which one would you rather be focusing on, the rash, which is painful for the person who's going through it--there's no question about it, and they're seeing their health care professional--or something you need to know about, as we talked about, under the criteria for a serious adverse event where it's a life and death situation? This is the philosophy we're talking about.
In terms of the health care professionals, you asked the question about enforcing it. It would create another burden on these doctors and health care professionals who are on the ground. We don't have enough of them in this country and worldwide. How do you encourage that, to report without--