It depends on which study you look at, but, definitely, more than 60% of the natural health product companies are small or medium-sized. Overall, with respect to Vanessa's Law, there would be minimal impact because, again, these are only circumstances where you have a serious safety risk and you have a company that's not complying with that safety risk.
The example that was used in the Auditor General's report was actually a tea extract. It was contaminated with something called mycophenolate, which is a pharmaceutical product that's used for immunosuppression in people who have had organ transplants. It was first noted in 2017. By 2018, the company still hadn't recalled it. By 2020, it was back on the market online, selling these products. Exposure to mycophenolate for women who are pregnant can cause miscarriages and birth defects. That was the example in the Auditor General's report.
I think a company that is small or medium-sized in this environment would want companies that are not compliant and not abiding by the rules to have some corrective action and to have circumstances whereby we can create a level playing field.
Again, if you're making a quality product, you're abiding by the regulations. This would not have an impact. Actually, there are provisions in Vanessa's Law that get into the technicalities for the corporations I referenced, which would actually be advantageous for businesses to help them in terms of standards and—