With respect to ceftiofur, it is not used willy-nilly. Ceftiofur is used in ova to prevent a sickness in day-old chicks that come from a susceptible breeder flock. It's not used across the country. It's not used all the time. It is used when there is a specific issue. It's used once in the egg, and that's it. It is not in the feed. Let's be clear when we're talking about something like ceftiofur. It's important how it's used. I appreciate the opportunity there.
As for disclosing levels, we report to CFIA all the antibiotic usage that is put on a flock.
The other thing that comes out, in reference Ms. Dhalla's question, is that there is a small percentage of use in chickens that is not done by a veterinarian. If you have a flock issue and it goes through a flock, you're going to use a whole flock. You're going to put trust in a veterinarian to figure out what you need to do, because we have six weeks to market in a chicken flock. We don't have time to test one out, see if it works, go back to the drug store, see if Advil works better than Tylenol. We're going to go to the vet, and the vet is going to prescribe. That's how it gets done. The percentage of over-the-counter in our industry is small.