We're currently in the process of hiring specialists—OB/GYNs—who will help us provide advice to build a better program there. They will advise us how to better manage, from a health care perspective, women in the perinatal period, and make sure we're preventing any potential injuries. We know that's a period prone to injuries, so we're working in partnership there. We hope to be able to build a better prevention program, and also a care program. We won't reinvent the wheel, though, because a lot of it has already been done, mainly by our colleagues in the U.S. and the U.K. That's why international collaboration is so important.
In February, we were lucky to host a symposium at the Canadian embassy in the U.S. We invited our partners from the Five Eyes community and tried to share what we're doing, respectively, from a women's health perspective. We agreed at that conference to keep working together to develop the clinical practice guidelines that will allow us to move together in improving women's health in the military.