Since SARS, certainly learning from the pandemic of H1N1 but also with our existing vaccination programs, we have a lot of capacity and protocols already in place. This is what public health is every day. In our pandemic preparedness plans and our national federal-provincial-territorial response plans, the vaccine response is a major piece of the response, which goes all the way down from the acquisition of a vaccine. For example, for a pandemic of influenza, we actually have contracts and everything in place. There isn't a vaccine available, unfortunately, for this novel virus. Should there be, all of the experiences and processes and infrastructures that we use to get ourselves prepared for an influenza pandemic will be brought to bear on how we do this.
In the last pandemic, H1N1, Canada had the highest vaccination rate globally. We have the ability. Essentially our aim is, should anybody in Canada want a vaccine at the time, to be able to deliver it to them. Unfortunately, right now that is not an option.