Thank you.
I'll just take one example of what is often the side that is not talked much about, and that is the involvement of affected communities, people living with HIV. We have a number of projects that we're currently funding.
One, for example, is with the Canadian AIDS Society. They have been funded to look at some of the lessons learned from existing public health interventions, existing vaccination programs, to see how we can better prepare the HIV community for the eventual availability of not only a HIV vaccine but other vaccines as well. This is just one example in our community, in social dimensions, where we are working collaboratively with the community as well. On the research community, there are currently 13 projects that have been funded through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and they range from coast to coast in this country. Certainly, a large initiative that will be launched in the coming weeks by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research as well as CIDA is a collaboration between Canadian and developing country researchers to continue to push forward the discovery of new vaccines and new vaccine concepts, as Dr. Cameron talked about, which is really critical to ensuring we have a robust pipeline in the long term for finding vaccines.