Okay.
I have just one last little question, and I gather there are only a few seconds left. The Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse just put out an enormously excellent report on alcohol, tobacco, and drugs. With regard to the alcohol question, they indicated that the deaths from alcohol misuse had gone up significantly relative to drugs and tobacco.
In their report, they mentioned something that you have not mentioned, and I'm wondering why. It has to do with binge drinking. Binge drinking is the worst kind, the most dangerous kind, of drinking for the unborn child. It is different from any other abuse because it's not a cultural thing, it's not a demographic thing; it in fact crosses all demographics. Binge drinking happens in social life. We have not educated Canadians on this important research finding, which has been there for the last decade.
Why hasn't anybody in the Government of Canada--since you're not Health Canada, I assume--said anything to corroborate or to collaborate in or to initiate some sort of project to tell Canadians what binge drinking is and why it is so dangerous to the unborn child?