Poverty has a long list of issues to be dealt with, and I don't think anybody is suggesting one solution. This proposed act is not one solution to eliminate poverty, but it's one solution to give equal access to the necessary prescription drugs, regardless of whether you have a high or low income or you are living in poverty. That's where nurses come in. Getting your prescription drugs should not depend on your level of income or whether you're insured. That has been the case for as long as we've been supporting a national pharmacare program.
In regard to gender, if I look at our nurse practitioners and our regular registered nurses, the whole contraceptive movement is changing day to day. It is not the same way it was when I was in my mid-twenties, when it was just one pill. Today, it's a concept where the health domain has expanded and is helping women of all ages. This is one way to help more than 50% of the population, and it's important to go forward with the bill to make sure we do that.
Again, it's one piece of the puzzle to help gender equality, and it's one piece of the puzzle to help our poverty situation.