Thanks very much.
I was going to go where my colleague Alex went. I'll just extend that to point out that, when we think about a child health strategy and a federal government role, it's about ensuring we apply a child health lens to policy decisions, and not only health care policy decisions, but others.
If you think about examples like some of the pharmaceutical shortages and, of course, around immunization, too often, as those discussions are happening, there is not a lens to think about what the implications are for children and youth in Canada. As Alex just described, regarding pharmaceutical trials and decision-making, we very often don't look at children and youth, but that just multiplies across so many other dimensions.
If you have a child health strategy, hopefully a component of that is the federal government's lead in ensuring we always apply that lens: What are the implications, the circumstances, and the needs of children and youth?