If I can move along to what I call cyber-medicine or something like that, I was watching a television program, and I've gone to the Minister of Health with this: there are now apps for iPhones, and in these apps, you can take an ECG at home on your iPhone and ship it to your doctor. The particular cardiologist who did that also has another app, a little device that he puts on his abdomen, and it tells him by the minute what his blood glucose is.
But surprisingly in that same interview, and I don't know if you've seen it, he says that his group is very close to commercializing it. I think there might be some application here for apps in the battlefield. That's why I'm suggesting it. It's actually being developed like a tri-corder—we've seen Star Wars—and they're actually developing those that take your heart rate, etc. He says that he's developing an app that will tell your iPhone when you're going to have a heart attack. A nano smaller than a grain of sand is put into the bloodstream and can detect the beginning of cells coming off the cell wall and send a signal to your iPhone, thereby sending an alarm. Then you call the doctor.
Are you aware of any studies being done by any nation—usually it's our neighbour to the south, in collaboration—that might be looking at apps that can be used in the field and that will greatly assist the medical personnel there in being able to transmit from the scene of the injury to the hospital, let's say, so they can better prepare for it? Is that being looked at?