Respectfully, Chair, I'm a pediatrician. That's how I was trained. I was trained to look after children. I don't think there's anything more tragic than the loss of a child, and I don't think any parent should have to live through that. I'm sure that these parents very much loved their child.
That was not the intent. The intent of the discussion we're having is that if you have natural health products that make claims against serious diseases and people believe those claims, they may be using those treatments instead of using treatments that could potentially help their own condition or that of their loved ones. That was really the context.
The other example was a physician who said that one of their patients was taken off their medications and put on a natural health product for seizures, and that this had tragic consequences. It was just in that context.
I don't want to cast aspersions on any parents. It's just that when products are being misrepresented there can be consequences, and it's not just the toxicity of the product itself.