Yes, without a doubt. The point I was trying to make around the proposition of developing a national sexual health promotion strategy was aimed at exactly that. There would be a federal standard to which all curriculum would be held. Again, we see across the nation a huge variability in terms of what's being taught and how it's being taught. The end result is that we're not evaluating what impact that's having on actual behaviours across the life course.
To use the example I alluded to earlier about rates of STIs increasing in Canada since the 1990s, clearly more education needs to be done. I think it should not be optional. I think it should be just like history. Parents can object to their kids being taught history, but this is part of the Canadian curriculum. This is the standard. Everybody gets it.