Okay.
I would partner very actively with the Assembly of First Nations and Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami to address injuries in those very vulnerable populations and help them to have a strategy for injury prevention that works in first nations and Inuit communities. It's a huge problem there. They do have people working on it, but they could definitely use some support.
If you talked about falls and things like that, it would be the playgrounds and helping people make their homes safer.
One of the bottom lines I would address is poverty and inequity. I mean, that's a fundamental root cause. It's hard for parents to keep their kids safe and to help them get to school safely if they have to work two jobs. It's hard for parents to buy safety equipment, to buy a bicycle helmet if someone gives them a bicycle, if they don't have adequate income to do that.
I would definitely look upstream at the social determinants of health and I would work actively with policy-makers, such as the federal government and the provincial governments, to keep kids safe--in their cars, on the streets, everywhere they go.