Thank you. I appreciate that as well.
Ultimately, I think that when we look at aspects of what we're dealing with, you brought up a point about.... I come from rural Saskatchewan. My colleague from the Bloc comes from rural Quebec, and my colleague from Nunavut comes from much farther. My riding, which I consider rural, is not even close to my colleague's from Nunavut. For my colleague beside me, who comes from a rural area in the London area, it's ultimately a half-hour drive, but it takes two or three hours for our constituents to get where they are going. Our female constituents are dealing with practitioners who come from various parts who have never lived in that area.
How do we educate those practitioners to make certain that that information for women is being put out during that time so that they know what to do? They drive three hours to go for a meeting and, as you said, Dr. Montreuil, the reality focuses on the baby as opposed to focusing on the mother. That is a big challenge, so how do we improve that?