Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'd also like to thank each of the witnesses here today. I listened to each of your speeches. I'd like to especially thank Dr. Haggie for acknowledging this government's support of caregivers with our caregiver tax credit. So thank you for that.
I'm just going to touch base on what my colleague Mr. Williamson has mentioned, as well as Dr. Morin across the way. The common theme or thread from each of the speakers seems to be tied into preventive measures. I heard from Ms. Mildon regarding—I actually wrote it down—the ability to fully diagnose hypertension. If you don't, it leads to stroke and cardiac disease. I've heard that the onset of chronic diseases can be delayed if we actually get to younger patients and change their lifestyles. So I want to thank you each for touching on that.
Given that young people—and we all were young at one time, and some of us still may be—tend to see themselves in a different light, that they are invincible, that they're not going to fall into the path of chronic disease or other sorts of ailments, I'm just wondering.... I've heard we should get to the students in schools and so forth, but what age group do you think should be targeted so that later on in life—in our sixties and seventies and so on—chronic disease can be prevented, realistically keeping in mind that young people tend to do what young people are going to do? I'm just curious to know, and I'm not sure who the question should be directed at.