And I admire your work very much. I wanted to ask you a specific question about the dental use of prescription drugs. In 2007, Purdue Pharma paid a $600-million fine in the U.S. to settle charges that they had illegally marketed OxyContin. OxyContin is thought to be, if not our worst, one of our worst drug abuse problems in Canada and the United States. When they originally sold it in 1996, they told doctors that it was not addictive, or at least not as addictive as other painkillers, and that's how they marketed it. The exact opposite was true, so they paid a $600-million fine to settle this, and everybody walked away, nobody went to prison.
I have a problem now with some of my teens in Oakville who were given oxycodone or OxyContin when they went to get their wisdom teeth out by dentists and got addicted to those painkillers. Their parents have to drive them now to Peggi DeGroote's methadone clinic in Burlington to get help. It seems like everyone's just sitting on their hands. Is there any way to get a message to dentists that this is an overuse of medication? For getting wisdom teeth out, all you need is Tylenol, and it's foolish and irresponsible to give young people such powerful painkillers when they're getting their wisdom teeth out.