Thank you again, Mr. Chair.
I'm going to start by expressing my appreciation to all of you. In my last round of questioning, I'm sure Ms. Voisin particularly would know I was not communicating directly with her, but to someone else who hopefully would be watching, some of whom might be staff members or MPs in the room right now.
I'm not going to apologize for being impatient when it comes to mental health, particularly kids' mental health. I'm not going to apologize for being impatient when it comes to kids who are experiencing increasing suicidal thoughts and when we're dealing with a raging opioid crisis.
When it comes to a lack of services for people with developmental disabilities, particularly people with autism, the impact of inaction on diagnosis and early intervention and education, and eventually participating in the workforce, and all of those different things, we should, as members of Parliament, be impatient about these things. Hopefully, the communications we have here drive action on some of these things. The Canada mental health transfer is a great place to start, and the suicide prevention hotline is a good place to start.
I'm going to turn my attention back to autism, though, if I could.
The government funded the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences—I think that's what it's called—study of a national autism strategy. I know it was chaired by Lonnie Zwaigenbaum, who is a global autism research rock star, and included phenomenal stakeholders, including many autistic Canadians.
I think the report that was put forward was over 400 pages. I'm wondering if someone could give us a bit of an overview or summary of what might have been in that report.
Is anyone here able to do that?