I'm sorry, I'm not sure of your terminology.
We had a committee led by a High Court judge that included patient advocates, legal experts, and medical experts evaluating the medical report, having already passed through a process of increasing the probability of the individual's being thalidomide. By the time we would get to our committee process, we already had a high probability that the person's mother was in a place in which it was likely that thalidomide would have been available and prescribed to her and that the damage could have been caused by it.
We're then looking for the diagnostic issue, which is, as one of your colleagues said earlier, that such things as genetic testing come in to show what is not thalidomide. There is no genetic test to show that somebody is thalidomide-damaged, but genetic testing eliminates people who might otherwise look as if they are.