Thank you very much, Chair.
It's an interesting discussion. I guess I still can't wrap my mind around the fact that surgeons want it and patients probably want it, although they're not really sure they need it. I guess I can't understand why we don't just move on. I realize it's expensive, etc., but it only makes common sense.
I guess the other thing I would point to is that, in my mind, the manufacturers do bear some complicity in this and some reasonable amount of need to be part of the system in the sense that, if you own a car and something happens to it, you get a notice that there's a recall. Your manufacturer sends you a notice telling you that you'd better go in and get it fixed. I realize that there's a middle person in here—namely, a surgeon—and that may make it more difficult.
That being said, Dr. Morris, you talked a bit about the textured implants. Maybe you could tell us a bit about that process.... Obviously, it's not textured in your sense, so it'll keep you away from the manufacturers. However, if you were to choose a particular implant for a patient, tell us a bit about how that's tracked or what's happening at the current time just so that we can understand that.