Yes, but when you look at it from a statistical point of view it doesn't sound very frightening because the numbers are down at 1% or 2%, or something like that. I think it's about 1% across Canada in children. The problem, of course, is that is really the tip of an iceberg, and it's a disease that you shouldn't get, if you're going to get it, until you are 50 or 60 or 70. That is very frightening, because most people with type 2 diabetes, even if they work hard to control their disease, within 15 years or so usually develop the complications of diabetes. So if you have children developing diabetes at age 10 and developing the complications of diabetes at age 25, it's a very frightening prospect for the health system.
There's an excellent researcher in Manitoba who has had a pediatric obesity and diabetes clinic for a number of years. When she went to follow up those children to find out what happened to them after they left her clinic--because she's a pediatrician--many of them were on dialysis and some of them had already died of their disease. It's a very frightening prospect.