I can speak to that from the Global Affairs Canada side. We have a regular program of exercises, tabletop exercises. We work with other government departments, specifically on exercises related to international pandemic response following on our experience with the SARS and Ebola responses in the past. Abroad, we have regional emergency program managers who travel to missions abroad and do these exercises with each particular embassy to practice how they would react. Our standing rapid deployment team officers go through specialized training at least twice a year. They engage in these kinds of exercises. They actually do scenario-based field exercises about responding to consular emergencies on a large scale.
All of this comes together in these responses to be implemented in the field. The systems that we've had have allowed us the ability, for example, to deploy officers so quickly. We have a team of officers every week on 24-hour notice to move. Like the kind of team that went into Wuhan or that will be accompanying the aircraft, we can deploy them. Whether it be for the plane crash we saw with Ukrainian airlines in Iran a few weeks ago or for a situation like this, that kind of emergency practice and protocol is very important to the response.