I think it's an appropriate moment to make one observation. This is an opportunity to think of young parents. Ms. Goodridge has been very passionate, effective and brave in sharing her own experience with her child, who had pain from teething and couldn't get pain medication, and bringing up young parents across this country who can't get pain medication for their children.
It's appropriate to point out the policy symmetry between this issue and lack of dental care, because there are millions of children and parents in this country who go to bed every night with pain because they can't get access to dental care. Whether you're a parent who has a teething child and you can't get pain medication, or you're a parent with an adolescent child who's going to bed at night with the same pain because he can't get dental care, it's the same parental pain. It's the same frustration. I think it's the same health need.
It's an opportunity to remind all of us, as parliamentarians, about consistency. I'm hoping that this can serve as a good example for all of us around this table, from all parties, to work constructively to address this problem, not only for the temporary issue of pain medication, but also for the structural opportunity to fix the problem of ensuring that all children get access to oral health care in this country.