As I mentioned in my speech, we know that about 90% of people over the age of 65 are facing chronic diseases. So that's a fairly substantive number. The Public Health Agency doesn't keep stats on age groups younger than that specifically. I'm not sure if Mr. Joanette does or not, but obviously in that context we of course want to keep working on ways to keep people healthy. That's one of the reasons we work right across the life course. We know that the biggest impacts often happen in children. So a lot of the work of Public Health involves looking at younger children. Again, we recognize that we have to work right across a lifespan, but that's where the biggest bang for the buck is for long-term health.
I hope that answers the question. That's what we do.