What I should note is that these devices, where they have nicotine, currently are actually not legal, so Health Canada has been pursuing enforcement measures. We have been working with the Canada Border Services Agency to make sure that when product comes in that contains nicotine and that is not consistent with the rules, it gets stopped at the border.
On our efforts domestically when we are taking a regulatory action, we're obviously well aware that a lot of provinces have put in place frameworks, and we have been focused largely on product that has been mislabelled. The label might say that it's “nicotine-free” or that it doesn't contain nicotine, but in fact it does. We've been targeting our enforcement efforts.
We have been doing policy work and looking at the report of the standing committee from the last session and the recommendations it laid out. There's been a lot of work internally in the department on what options we can bring forward to the government for response. I'll leave it to the government to speak to next steps, but we certainly have examined that report carefully.
In terms of research, that would be more for CIHR.