I'd be delighted to answer that question.
This is very much in the media these days. I did five interviews on that yesterday alone. We are very well prepared for that. We have equipped laboratories across the country to detect this. That's coming out of our national laboratory, where we've equipped them and assisted them to do that. We've got guidance in working with physicians for heightened awareness. That means that when they're seeing somebody with symptoms that are compatible, they're asking for the travel history, asking whether somebody has been in the Middle East. They're doing the tests to confirm and be sure.
We have our quarantine officers who have worked to train border services and folks at the airports and crossings to look for disease like that. We've been working very carefully and very closely with the WHO. In fact, Canada's providing leadership. A doctor in our agency, Dr. Theresa Tam, is the co-chair of the emergency committee that just met. As you're aware, it was declared yesterday that this was not an emergency concern. That information is based on—