Thank you.
Maybe I'll refer to one that's not health-related, because we've had a few examples of that. In the area of economic empowerment, one area that we've been working on in Bolivia is aquaculture, helping women fishers to feed their communities and to build some capabilities in small business by essentially growing fish. This has a lot of different dimensions to it.
First of all, we've established specific people who are going to benefit, targeting women but benefiting all their communities. We know that the indirect benefit is huge. They've increased their food security. We give them training. We give them some skills. We give them resources to build this capacity, and then that multiplies. They have better nutrition, because they're eating more fish. They're starting small businesses. They are hiring other people, because as businesses grow they create businesses along the value chain. A restaurant now sells some of those products. They participate in local value chains. They sell their fish to markets. They're better educated. They're then able to keep their children in schools, keep them healthier and use that income.
It creates that long-term tail. What's really exciting about projects like this is that our involvement has a particular time frame, but we're actually able to know that three, four and five years later the benefits of those early interventions are really delivering for those communities long after we're gone.