Yes. In Canada we have many more diagnostic clinics than we did in the past. They're continuously opening in different places. Quebec has its first one now; it's exciting. We are diagnosing more.
We're trying to change the stigma around alcohol use in pregnancy so there's not the shame and blame context. We're hoping that women are becoming more comfortable talking about alcohol use. We're doing a lot of education so that everybody understands the potential implications of alcohol use during pregnancy. We're working a lot with health professionals and front-line workers so that they know how to talk to women about alcohol use, because there's an art to that and there's a relationship piece to that.
I don't know. Dr. Popova has done a lot of work on prevalence in Canada. We know different populations have a higher incidence. We know about child welfare, as Dr. Andrew suggested. We know justice. We know some isolated communities. There are lots of other factors for that.
I don't know the answer to that. I'd like to think it's decreasing, but the prevalence of women drinking during pregnancy is not decreasing.