In the protocol, is there anything you might have to be more careful with in a teen who's not at full adult body weight?
So you might want to lower his mineral dosages slightly. That's really the only change I would make. You don't need to go up to the max dosage because he's smaller. So, for children, I typically recommend half of the max dosages that I talk about in the module. So, for iodine, it'd be 250 micrograms. For selenium, it'd be 100-150 micrograms. And then for molybdenum, it'd be about 75 micrograms. So that's what I recommend for children because they have a much lower body weight. Now, Sally, I believe you said your son, he's going through puberty, he's growing quickly. So, that takes a toll on nutrient reserves. He could need more minerals as he's going through puberty because his body is using up a lot more nutrients. So you could probably, he probably still needs the adult mineral dosages since he's becoming an adult, he's growing and physically turning into an adult. So, what I'd recommend, what I'd do is to give him half of the maximum dosages for now. So the dosages that I had mentioned earlier, and then once I see the results of his hair test, we’ll know how deficient he is. We'll see how severe his mineral deficiencies are. I'll have actual data. And then at that point, I might recommend increasing his dosages. So yeah, that's what I would, that's what I'd suggest.