Certainly, initially, we had minimal facilities to support medical. So what we did is we let people come to Canada, and then they were given instructions, and that includes some of the children, to get their medicals as quickly as possible. We wanted to make sure that if there was a public health issue we were aware and could work.
Some of the children who were evacuated in Operation Stork had a few medical issues, and right away we had DND doctors on the flight, the air companies also had doctors, and CHEO was here right away in Ottawa to help. And then, if they were transferred to a province, we worked with the province to make sure their health was taken care of.
Our designated medical practitioners, the doctors who do our medicals pre-immigration, are now up and running, so we plan to use them to start doing medicals, in part because of issues like tuberculosis in Haiti, to ensure that we've at least done tests so that we know, if there's a health problem, to support them when they arrive in Canada.
So those are the major things we're doing right now.
One of the other aspects that we think might happen, because documents will be harder to get with all the destruction and because of the nature of the case, is we may do a little bit more DNA testing so that we can establish a relationship.