Laura Schoenfeld: Yeah, with a two-year-old, you have to be really careful because obviously they’re not just small adults. They have different digestive systems and different nutrient needs and that kind of thing. If you wanted to use a little bit of magnesium powder and a little bit of vitamin C powder, you could try that. Honestly, I would go with the Galactomune and the Iberogast before I would use vitamin C or even magnesium for that children. Magnesium and vitamin C, with constipation, those are really just band-aid approaches. The reason I call them band-aid approaches is because the main way that they produce bowel movements is by pulling water into the digestive tract. They’re almost like more of a laxative, whereas something like Galactomune, the way that that works is that it feeds the gut bacteria and it selectively feeds beneficial gut bacteria, so not only is it helping in the short term to encourage bowel transit time, but it also is building those beneficial flora so that you’re creating a better gut environment over the long run, and you can stop taking that product, and you’ll still have those beneficial flora there to keep doing their job. Then the Iberogast is more of a motility promoter, I guess, from a neurological perspective, so you’re not just kind of forcing a bowel movement by pulling water into the digestive tract. It’s more that it’s stimulating the natural contractions and the movement that actually causes motility. I feel like I am more comfortable with that than I am with magnesium and vitamin C being used in a kid. It’s not that you shouldn’t use them at all, and maybe you use a couple hundred milligrams of vitamin C and maybe 50 to 100 milligrams of magnesium with a child that young, but I wouldn’t start there. I’d definitely start with the prebiotic and the Iberogast.