When I left Birmingham about 12 or 13 years ago, I left it as a specialist advisor in health. We've been almost driven down a much narrower path over the last, particularly, five or six years because of, I guess, the devastation that we're seeing in terms of the obesity crisis with our young people. But my background has to do with legal and illegal drugs and with physical activity. In fact, my original training was as a specialist physical education teacher.
So I'm passionate about linking the two, but at the moment it is a relatively small part, an understated part, one might say, of Scottish and English policy. It is much more strongly being pursued in Wales. I'm working very closely with the Welsh Assembly government to deliver policy that I hope will mean that schools, when they're looking at food and nutrition, at the same time look at physical activity, both in the curriculum and the recreative facilities available within the school, and link that very closely to what is available in the community outside, whether it's public services or whether it's based on the local clubs that can offer support to kids and good quality coaching to kids.
So it's not something that I am spending as much time on as I would like, but it's something that I see being pulled into the picture in the rest of the U.K. as the work in Wales, which is of a first-class quality, gets more and more noticed.