They're significant. The effect and impact can't be underestimated.
However, we do see a discrepancy between those legal wins and what's actually happening on the ground. It's evidenced through research. It's evidenced through the anecdotes that you hear.
There needs to be a multipronged approach. Winning legal rights is part of it, but there has to be an ongoing transformative societal change around all these gaps. The health sector is a significant one, as you heard, but it also includes other areas, from education to criminal justice to just community change in general. A lot of what we still need to do will happen on the ground. It happens with working in communities, and the health committee study that you are beginning is a big start and an important start because this is such a significant area. It's just continued work.
However, I can't overemphasize and I repeat what Lori talked about, which is collecting data and having adequate data and evidence that show those disparities so we can then take action and have evidence with which to move against.