Yes, that is not a problem.
If you take a look at unintentional injuries, 38% of those injuries are falls. And those are not just falls of seniors. Those are falls of kids, occupational falls, all over the place. About 25% are motor vehicle-related, 5% are poisoning, 2% are fire burns, 1% is blows in sports, and 1% is drowning. You could pretty well say motor vehicle-related, suicide, and falls are the leading causes.
There is a new area I'm getting more interested in. The third leading cause of death in Alberta is so-called accidental poisonings. These are overdoses; they are not accidental poisonings. They are related to substance abuse within individuals of both prescription and non-prescription medication.
It's a new area that's rapidly growing as one of the problem areas, but we do know where the problems are. As a matter of fact, every medical examiner or coroner, by law, has to be told about every sudden, unexpected death. The trouble is that nobody is keeping track of the score. We have all these injuries and they're all being parcelled out, but there is no one central agency that actually looks at the numbers.
If you look at the numbers, as I said, it translates to a fully loaded 767 crashing every five days. It is a major problem. Remember, those are the ones who die. The ones who don't die are even more costly to the health care system: the spinal cord injuries and the brain injuries.
In the past, these people used to die. They're not dying now and so there are many long-term care facilities in any community for people who have serious brain injuries from which they are never going to recover, or serious spinal cord injuries as well.