Thank you very much, Madam Chair.
And I do want to welcome back our Liberal colleague. It's nice to have you back on the health committee, even though it's for a short period of time.
I wanted to pick up on what my colleague started off with.
I was a little bit surprised when I saw that number: $190 billion as the cost to our economy for chronic diseases. You might as well be running a government when you're looking at the size of that figure. Again, it was mentioned how it seems that we focus a lot on acute care.
My background, as you know, as a chiropractor...we've always been trying to focus on wellness and prevention. It's nice to see the NDP placed one of my colleagues on the committee as well.
Once you have diabetes, it's too late in many cases, and the cost and the expense of treating it and managing it for the rest of a person's life is huge. The same with cardiovascular diseases.
I wanted to move a little bit towards the prevention and wellness side of things. I was wondering, are you aware of any programs for kids? Is there any research out there on what we can do to get kids thinking about wellness and prevention?
Again, my colleague brought up the jurisdictional issues, because many things that we can do, I suppose, would have to be done at schools, where kids are spending the most hours out of their day. But I was wondering if you could elaborate a little bit on what you see as challenges when we're dealing with the provinces and territories and different jurisdictions we work with.