I could answer that very quickly.
Dr. Al Driedger, one of the godfathers of nuclear medicine, if you will, in Canada, was involved in that advisory committee. It got very testy, according to him, in the sense that the information given from the medical community was felt to be a biased perspective, on the part of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, and the commission felt that what we were doing was not appropriate—and it was disbanded at that point.
I gather a lot of derogatory statements were made at that time, and based on those interactions, there was some concern about the reputation of the physicians at that association.
So it was not an amicable split; it was a forced split.