To answer your question, I asked and was told it wasn't available. The other thing we did in the research was that we looked at what the testing entailed and what was involved. We pulled up what's called depleted natural uranium in urine, a PPT laboratory analytical exercise. This was Defence Canada.
Los Alamos laboratories decided to research on the labs. It wasn't just one. There were four labs doing testing on the Canadian soldiers. What it found was that none of those four labs could accurately measure depleted uranium in the urine samples that were provided to them. None of them. No one ever told the Canadian Forces members that their urine samples were incorrect and inconclusive. They were all told that they were negative. Then they found out all of a sudden that these labs could not do the testing. The only testing would be ICMS, which used to be offered at Memorial University. It no longer is, and a lot of these labs at that time couldn't do it. You could go to the U.K., but you'd have to do it on your own.
This was offered in VAC right up to two years ago. It was on the website and on the Canadian Forces website, but if you asked about it, they'd say that it didn't exist and that they couldn't do it. It has subsequently been removed.