It's one baby in ten but with a representative, a proportion; you don't need a high number of cords. There are a lot of babies born in Canada, and you don't need all their cord blood units in the bank. That would be a prohibitive expense. You need high-quality cord blood units, and that translates into units that pass a multitude of potency tests. You need large units that come from a diverse population.
On the absolute number of cord blood units we ought to get into the bank to represent our population, if we got to 20,000 to 50,000 high-quality cord blood units in the bank, we would start to be able to contribute to the international inventory of cord blood units and meet the needs of Canadians.