Yes.
With licensed products, there are a range of preparations, including gels, and there has been a concerted push to come up with other non-smoked preparations. It's not only smoked products; there are infusibles, oils, gels and so on. That allows for better circumscribed doses. Some of those come in considerably lower doses, 2.5 milligrams of THC and so on. It does exist.
If I could be very naughty and quickly comment on the historical point, it was around 1836 to 1843 that William O'Shaughnessy, who was a military physician, took samples of Indian hemp to London, England, to be tested for trials on this sort of issue. It was in the mid-1800s that the British Parliament was having a very similar discussion to this one.
I'm in the process of publishing a study which has very similar findings to what we're talking about now: low dose, higher dose, high potency, what was then referred to as Indian hemp insanity, the impact on taxation and so on, and suggesting that young people below the age of 16 shouldn't use it. There's also a considerable amount of military evidence that was considered.
I think there is urgency. We need to show that we've moved on from 1836.