Yes, one hundred percent.
In the pulmonary-lung world, the two primary conditions are asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, COPD. For both of those diseases we use a medicine called, as a broad term, an inhaled corticosteroid. It is a very minute dose of steroid introduced into the lungs to help deal with the conditions.
The concern that patients and other practitioners have had is that steroids suppress your immune system. If you have asthma or COPD, does taking this inhaled steroid put you at any higher risk of potentially acquiring the infection? There's no evidence to suggest that is the case. In fact, it's the opposite. We really want patients with those two conditions to optimally manage their lung condition to prevent them from developing some of the more serious complications of the infection, if they were to acquire it. In fact, we tell them to be more compliant with it.
The only issue we've run into relates to dispensation. Because of the pandemic and the preparation for a potential hospital surge, Health Canada recognized, through a report from the pharmaceutical industry, a need for salbutamol, a rescue inhaler also known as Ventolin. You might recognize it as the blue inhaler, as it's the one most commonly seen around. It's meant to be used in a rescue circumstance. There's going to be a potential shortage of it because hospitals have acquired a large quantity of it in anticipation of a hospital surge.
Health Canada and the partners we identified in our notes got together and developed a strategy. The comment earlier about dispensing one month at a time, really, from our world, has come from that standpoint. We weren't sure what was going to end up being needed and required as the industry tries to replenish its supplies.
Right now there's no concern. I think we've developed a really nice mitigation strategy to deal with that, should it happen.