One of the things we've seen for quite some time is that there are a lot of interventions that have been put into place that will ideally, if they are effective, decrease the demand for opioids in the long term, but one of the immediate impacts they've had is to decrease the supply. I think that probably these formulations fit into one of those. One of the things is that if you have a supply that is in excess of the demand, then you have what we see now, which is organized crime stepping in and filling a market.
I don't think that directly answers your question, but that's the landscape that we're in right now.