You may want to add to the response to that question.
In our brief we've highlighted a number of the ones that we see as high impact based on what evidence shows us around what children and mothers are actually dying from. What the evidence shows, for example, is that two-thirds of children die of preventable diseases. We need to invest funds in those. Thirty percent of children die of malnutrition, so we need to invest resources in those.
What we're seeing as high-impact ones are like the administration of antibiotics to deal with pneumonia, zinc supplementation and oil rehydration therapy for dealing with diarrhea, very simple things like nets to deal with malaria. And we've all heard about nets already, so we're not talking about new and exotic things, but what our experience shows in the field and what research shows is that those are the things that actually have the highest impact.
Around newborn care for infection, again, administering antibiotics.... When it comes to mothers' care, it's around counselling on family planning, including contraception, and counselling on exclusive breastfeeding. We've heard about that for a long time, but these are simple, high-impact, cost-effective things we can do.
Do you want to add to that?