 With this sewage, which is almost consistently high with the daily numbers being within the 40s to 50s, we've been finding that we can get a lot more samples, and this has increased our turnaround time to almost four days. It's forced us to look at our processes from sample collection at the various sites, reception of samples from the main processing, the analytical aspect of it, and then the delivery of it, and just look at every single system and see where we can develop efficiencies and how we can reduce that and bring it back to the 12 to 24 hours that we've had. The team has taken on different strategies, so we should see that decreasing within the next few days, hopefully by next week, so we should see going back to what we've been accustomed to delivering and reducing the anxiety level. To note, we've processed almost 25 samples within St. Lucia, and 62% on that over the last four months, a substantial amount, approximately 15,000, and the large majority of the positives have come over that period as well. So we have our challenges, we're trying to overcome them, we've already started implementing some of those strategies to reduce it, and there should be some changes noted within the next few days.