It's an excellent point and that gives me a chance also to commend Mimi on her fine work while she was the CEO of the Alzheimer Society.
Her point is well taken, that there are certain diseases that disproportionately affect women, and this is one of them. Dementia does disproportionately affect women. In terms of the gender-based analysis we believe has been done—two guys sitting down here, frankly—we're looking at this disease to recognize that diseases that have affected women have historically had less attention, less funding, less research, than diseases that have affected men if you look at the funding that has gone on, and we're trying to change that.
I don't think that we have a focus on women in this bill, but because we're looking at dementia, it will focus itself on women and men. Since women have that caregiver facility, I think that looking at other things from the federal perspective that could affect this, whether it's changes to EI or episodic respite care and those kinds of things, those kinds of things could be discussed because there is a federal mandate there. I think this is an important statement that we need to put attention on diseases that have disproportionately affected women.