Thank you very much.
Thank you very much to all of you for having come here. Your presentations on various aspects were really very interesting.
I am a member from Quebec, and I met with some Parkinson Society representatives less than two weeks ago, and they explained some of the issues you have been discussing. It will be my pleasure to talk about them again.
There are various things that need to be improved. There will be a conference in two weeks on the topic of being physically active in order to have a better life, and its purpose will be to explain all of the benefits of physical exercise for those who suffer from this disease. There is the story of a Quebec man who has Parkinson's disease; he is a teacher in a CEGEP. When he is having a crisis, he finds a partner and starts to dance, because if he dances for five minutes, this allows him to keep his mobility and stay in shape. That is interesting.
One of the problems the organization said it had is that it only manages to reach some 500 of the 3,000 or so people who are living with the disease. Do you have any recommendations to make to us that might help to dispel the stigma around this disease, allow people who are living with it to access services more easily, and also allow them to talk about it?