Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the guests for coming today.
I'll start with a comment. Madame Lalonde brought up the fact that there are very few women at the committee table. I just want to stress that you don't have to be a woman to understand the issues we're talking about.
In my personal experience, I have two kids...well, my wife had two kids and I was along for the ride, and it was a bumpy ride. Both of my kids were born by emergency C-section in very difficult circumstances, more or less at the last second. Three weeks after my daughter was born, my wife wound up going into the hospital with very serious complications. She had twice her body's blood volume transfused in a 24-hour period. You can get a little bit of a grasp of how serious that was. Eventually she had to have an emergency hysterectomy, with all of the issues that followed. Thankfully, she made it through okay, but I'm always reminded that if we lived in a different country in the developing world, I wouldn't have a wife and I wouldn't have the two kids.
So when I'm looking at these numbers...I try to get beyond the numbers. I think of every one of these kids as though I'm thinking about my own and about every one of these mothers as though I'm thinking about my wife. It helps to put some perspective on it.
I ask why we, as a global community, haven't made the progress that we ought to have made on these millennium development goals. I think Mr. Pearson touched on a part of it when he talked about scattershot initiatives to try to keep everyone happy. That seems to have been an approach. There's a lot of talk, but nothing actually seems to be coming of it.
Even in this discussion that we've been having in Canada over the past few months, it seems as though many groups are focused on ideas and rights and equality. It's an important discussion for sure, but I think what the government tried to do when we came forward with this initiative was to focus on actually saving lives, bringing down those horrendous numbers, and having the most efficient and effective impact possible while, importantly, having the most support among Canadian taxpayers. I think that's an important part of the process here.
Ms. Dendys talked about funding as we move forward. If we're going to ensure long-term public support for funding moving forward, I think it's important to focus on measures that obviously have tremendous impact and are efficient, but that also have the broad support of the Canadian public. With regard to the measures we put forward as a government, the measures we've discussed, if you did a poll, probably 98% of Canadians would say, “Yes, we want to do that; that's a good idea. We need to move forward. We can't live with these numbers anymore.” As we get into the broader debate, I think we get closer to a 60-40 or 50-50 split, and I don't think that's productive. I don't think that's going to help us bring those numbers down.
Because it's important, I want to come to Ms. Dendys and talk about one of the things that impressed me about your presentation today. You actually put forward core recommendations. It looks like a game plan that seems fairly well thought out in terms of actually making an impact. Maybe you could speak to the research done by the organizations that make up your organization, in terms of the type of impact that approach will make in terms of bringing those numbers down.