I am actually also a veteran of SARS, so I guess I'm one of those people who were involved with SARS and H1N1, as were many other physicians and public health experts across the country. I would say that, yes, we are leaning on people who have gone through those, in terms of their experience, and we are using their expertise.
One of the key things we're doing right now, as I mentioned before, is to have a special advisory committee, which consists of the chief medical officers of health from each of the provinces and territories, and they, obviously, have their own experts and their own staff supporting them.
A layer below that, I'm actually the chair of something called the technical advisory committee. Many of the scientific questions, the recommendations, the programs and the policies that need to be developed and then sent to the special advisory committee for their review, consideration and approval are actually worked up at this technical committee. For that, there is representation on this technical advisory committee from the three key provincial health agencies—the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Public Health Ontario and the INSPQ from Quebec.
So we are harnessing all of the expertise across the country.