On medical tourism, my opinion goes the same way as Terri's. When a patient comes back.... Right now, what's very trendy is that those women are going to Morocco or Turkey more than Colombia. If I'm talking about Quebec, those patients go to Morocco and Turkey. When they come back, a lot of them—I cannot give you a percentage—are coming back with complications.
The cost of it comes back to our health care system. They spend that money outside, which is okay, because it's medical tourism. It costs them $4,000, and they have a trip. They go sightseeing. They get breast implants and something else. They come back and they have complications. They're sick. They have breast implants that are unknown.
For the surgeons who have them under their care here in the medical system, it's a puzzle. It's a problem. There should be something.... I don't know how. I'm not a business person at that level. If someone comes back, there should be a way to track those surgeries to help the health care professional when they come back, and there should be a way for those women to have those implants tracked. If something happens in the country of origin of those implants, how will those women know what's happening with those implants if they keep them?
In my group, we have so many women coming in, because a few days, months or weeks later they have all kinds of problems with those implants. They have mesh inside. They have long sutures and have so many problems.