 So I study tuberculosis and specifically I look at the endemic strains of tuberculosis in New Zealand, so strains that originate from New Zealand. So New Zealand is a low TB burden country, but we do about 300 cases every year. So these endemic strains are ethnic, are host specific, so they have only been found in Māori and Pacific. And because of that, there are disproportionate rates of this disease within these communities. My research is looking at the genetics of these three strains, and so I'm trying to find things that are unique about these strains, so things such as mutations, which we can then use to target for diagnostics. So if we can find something that's unique about these strains, we can then design hospital-based tests that can be run by clinicians to rapidly identify these strains and kind of bring down the transmission within these communities. So I hope the work that I do will contribute to combating the rates in New Zealand. So I would hope that the rate of tuberculosis in Pacific, which hasn't improved at all recently, can start to go on a decreasing trend, and so eventually we'll see lower rates of tuberculosis and overcome this disproportionate impact on the community.