Thank you, Mr. Chair.
It's nice to see you. Thank you for sharing your story of your daughter, Mr. Sansfaçon.
I guess we talked a lot today about women and how this could disproportionately be affecting women, whether it's single mothers or the fact that there is a wage gap in this country that doesn't allow women to save for things like this. I know, too, that it's actually harder for women to get private insurance because of the rate of breast cancer in this country and that sort of thing.
Last week we were talking about ovarian cancer, which is, again, a fatal disease that involves a lot of intervention and a lot of expenses that come along with illness.
I wanted to ask Mr. Sansfaçon about that idea of public insurance for something that you cannot plan for or think would come, especially at a young age.
Are there demographics that are disproportionately affected by relying so much on having private insurance for anything past those 26 weeks, which we don't even have yet?