Okay. I must admit that answer causes me some concern--that Mr. Kennedy has done this review, and while you may not have to follow all the steps in it, there's not some coordination going on between looking at the work that has already been done and the work you're currently doing. So when you say it doesn't have an impact, that concerns me as well.
You may be confronted by police officers and police chiefs or attorneys general at the table, but you also have a health minister and a former nurse at the table. My concern is whether either Mr. Smith or Mr. Palmer, or both, recommend positioning after the taser has been used. I think we know that about 10% of people walk around with cardiac arrhythmia, which may never cause them any problem, but it could under these circumstances. When people are in a prone position you have a buildup of acidosis, so people should be repositioned very quickly.
What kind of medical support--because it seems fairly inconsistent to me--does Taser and the research centre recommend?
Mr. Smith, first, please.