 This commission can bring together a wide range of people who have diverse backgrounds, different experiences, to really think about how do we continue to move this issue of global health forward. We're doing a lot as the U.S. in global health. We're known as leaders in global health, and that we have a lot of successes to build on, whether it's the PEPFAR program with the President's Malaria Initiative. But we also know that there are some real challenges. Our ability to sustain what we do, our ability to make sure that what we do is better coordinated, making sure that we're focused more on results as opposed to just what we put into our programs. But I think it's taking that tangible information and then figuring out how can that be a catalyst for our work. What we really want is to look at solutions, to look at not only the problem, but to be able to talk practically about what works. We have people sitting around the table who are very action-oriented people who want this report to not just sit on a shelf, but to be practical, to be focused enough, to be short enough that it's not just something that's an interesting exercise. We have an administration who has already made a commitment to global health, an incredible group of people, and a topic that cuts across a lot of different interests. So I think a report like this can really feed into a very active, ongoing process that will have an impact and that will really advance what we do in the area of global health.