<img src='https://i.cbc.ca/1.4642959.1525183329!/cpImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_460/genetic-frontiers-million-person-study.jpg' alt='Genetic Frontiers Million Person Study' width='460' title='In this Aug. 7, 2017, photo, Kenneth Parker Ulrich, left, a research technician at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, reads blood pressure data from Erricka Hager, a participant in the "All of Us" research program in Pittsburgh. The "All of Us" research program is run by the National Institutes of Health and plans to track the health of at least 1 million volunteers by 2019. By doing so, researchers hope to learn how to better tailor treatments and preventative care to people's genes, environments, and lifestyle. The University of Pittsburgh is running a pilot program with some of the first enrollees in the study. ' height='259' /> Wanted: A million people willing to share their DNA and 10 years of health habits, big and small, for science.