Okay. My question is with respect to children especially for undiagnosed disabilities. I've been trying to find the statistics on the number of undiagnosed disabilities, especially learning disabilities and other non-visible disabilities in children.
I was looking at HRSDC's website, actually, which had Statistics Canada details from the 2006 participation and activity limitation survey. It states that as of 2006, among children ages 5 to 14 years who have disabilities, 72.7% of boys had learning disabilities, and 63.3% of girls have chronic.... These are just the diagnosed children. We know that this is on the rise. We're realizing that there are a lot of children who haven't been diagnosed and are going through the system and having difficulties because of learning disabilities or chronic illness or whatever it might be. There's some sort of disability that hasn't been diagnosed.
What happens to those children who are now 14 years old and can't pass the test because they have a disability that's not diagnosed? Do they just not get to be Canadians with their parents and their family members?