Definitely. The last committee I attended was with the U.K., Australian, and U.S. military, and it was about medical issues from immunization. What we were looking at was management of the risk of a deployed member or an officer in all these countries: what kind of immunization did we offer him, what kind of medical support with regard to psychological, physical, etc.
As you know, there are all these UN clinics—it's an observation, not a criticism—and sometimes they don't have Canadian standards. For example, in Haiti, it's the Argentinian ARDA, and sometimes we have to liaison with them. There are committees to improve that, but I don't know how official that is. When you work for the UN, you take the position they give you, and you're trying to negotiate from there.