Thank you for the question.
I'm not familiar with that work by the WHO. It doesn't surprise me. Pregnant women, kids and babies are more vulnerable, generally, to a number of conditions.
This is fairly new work, in terms of looking at the impact of climate change. It's something the department is looking at, as we looked at sex- and gender-based analysis. It's considering the impact of climate change while developing programs and policies. It's relatively recent, so I don't have an example. We've been doing sex- and gender-based analysis for years, so we can point to past work that has reached some result. I don't have a specific example for you with respect to climate change.
I don't know whether any of my colleagues around the table are better positioned to answer that.