I would agree with that.
I have two quick things.
One is that, in overarching policies related to health, there be a dedicated child and youth component. Jim has spoken about some of the challenges in the recruitment of specialized personnel. Again, Ontario is what I know. Ontario data at the moment would tell you that there's no increase in volume in emergency departments, and it would tell you that primary care has recovered its volumes. That's true for the system as a whole; it's false for children. More children are going to emergency departments, and primary care is not seeing as many kids. So when you look at the whole system, kids get washed out in terms of impact. That's the first thing. Any broader strategy needs to have a carved-out, focused attention to children in health.
The second is to remember that one of the things that makes pediatric care different is that intervention can be prevention. If we talk about mental health, we know that two-thirds of adult mental health conditions and addictions trace their onset to adolescence. If we can intervene effectively in adolescence, that is actually prevention. It's treatment. It's treatment in the moment, but it is prevention of illness, need and cost later on.