As the CVO and the VP of science, I do engage with the faculties of agriculture and veterinary medicine quite often, but more so on this. One, we wanted to raise awareness with everybody. We've never had this disease in Canada. We developed training materials that we shared with anybody who was working in the agricultural sector or would be working there in the future, including students, graduate students, professors and clinicians. We also did this with the industry, using the same materials in terms of looking for signs of this disease and to whom they should report if they find those signs.
We continue to raise that, and now we're moving into preparedness. For example, if ever we need help from people, we were talking to some universities about whether we can actually make use of graduate students or even professors in veterinary medicine. This is the kind of stuff we're working on.