Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
The requirement that companies report to us any findings of significance in terms of public health has been tremendously valuable. What it allows us to do is not only identify individual issues but undertake trend analysis. That is perhaps the most important consideration here, and that is whether there are indicators found through the testing that's being undertaken in a facility that might suggest an organism is now becoming resident in the facility. We know that occasional contamination will happen in the production process, and that is why there are very strict protocols around sanitation in the facilities. However, if there is an indication that the organism is becoming resident and is therefore defeating the effectiveness of sanitation, our ability to identify that and respond to it becomes an incredibly valuable tool in terms of prevention, which is of course our largest interest. In fact, this approach is reflected in the policy Health Canada has now published.