Kevin Barry: Yes, Jon, this is Kevin. Yes, I think we would say that the pricing certainly is kind of more at historical norms, the kind of low-single-digit pricing. As we’ve looked at our internal data, here, we certainly — part of our Q1 performance was price contribution, but it was also a positive volume contribution. So we saw units grow this quarter as well. So it wasn’t just the one or the other. I think we expect that for some of those infection control products that we’ve been tracking that year-over-year deflationary impact is going to continue to be a drag for the next couple of quarters. The prices have stabilized but we’re still going to be comparing back to a higher kind of ASP basket for those products from last year.
So I think as we — so we’ll be dealing with that dynamic for the next couple of quarters. But I think for — if you kind of look at the category as a whole, we’d say, we’re seeing volume contribution as well as kind of more normalized historical price contribution for dental consumables.
Jon Block: Okay. Got it. Thanks for that. And then just maybe a small handful as part of the second question. For Dental equipment, should we still expect mid-single-digit growth for the year? Obviously, fiscal 1Q was down. You got a really tough comp in 4Q. So do we still think you can land at mid-single-digits for the year? And Kevin, still tax rate of 25% for the year. Is that correct? You were shy of that for the quarter. And did your messaging change a little bit on the deflationary for the infection control. I thought before that was supposed to ease in the back part of the year? And maybe in your prepared remarks, you sort of said that continues to the end of the fiscal year, maybe some clarification there?
Kevin Barry: Yes, I’ll take a couple of those. So yes, on the deflation, I think what I’d say is we really saw the prices kind of stabilize at a new level in our Q4 of fiscal ’23. So it’s probably — Q2 will have a headwind. Q3 will have a smaller headwind. Q4, it should be pretty marginal sort of how we see the pricing dynamics playing out for, Jon. And then on the tax rate, yes, we’d still say about 25%. We’re seeing a step-up this year in our tax rate due to some changes in the U.K. tax law, as well as some historical deductions that have expired for us. So I think that’s still the right number for your estimate. And equipment — yes. And I think — yes, you’re right. We do have some tough comps coming up in equipment the team is still pushing hard on that.
I think mid-single-digit long-term. And again, given some — not looking at quarter-to-quarter, but over a reasonable time frame is what we’d expect. And I just keep reiterating what we’re saying is I think the market is looking for these investments. And so we’re still pushing to get to that mid-single-digit long-term growth rate for equipment.
Don Zurbay: I think the — Jon, I think the metric we’ve kind of brought out every quarter is what does it look like if you look over the last 8 quarters, I think the I think the equipment growth is 4% in that time, and it kind of has been. So you can kind of think about it like that. I think the ups and downs here of a year we deal with. But over an 8-quarter period, that’s still — we still think that’s a pretty good number.
Operator: And your next question comes from the line of Elizabeth Anderson from Evercore ISI. Your line is open.
Elizabeth Anderson: Hi, guys. Thanks so much for the question. Just a quick question. How are you guys thinking about — obviously, you have interest expense in the quarter. How are you sort of expecting that to trend for the rest of the year?