Mr. Chair, I'd like to thank the member for an excellent question, a question that Tanya and I, who are both parents, also certainly ask as we raise our teenagers.
I can probably offer the most insight speaking about the international context. You are right that too often around the world youth and adolescents in developing countries don't receive adequate information both on their own rights, the right to bodily autonomy in particular, but also on sexuality and reproductive functions and services that they should have access to.
That's one of the reasons we are trying to take a comprehensive approach to sexual and reproductive health and rights, such that we are adding to our significant portfolio of maternal and child health programming with a specific focus on adolescents to ensure that they get access to current information, both through the formal curricula in the schools they attend but also more broadly through social services being made available to them so they can use that information to properly exercise bodily autonomy.
Whether that is by seeking out contraception or making decisions about their future, it is something we consider fundamental, and we feel that the comprehensive approach we have taken for SRHR, which follows best practices as identified by the World Health Organization, is the best way for us to support that.