The general comment I have would also follow up on what Madame Demers said; that is, that we also do some work on seniors. When you look at the senior population, people tend to look at it as a homogenous group. But there are very clearly three distinct groups when you look at it statistically.
You have the 65-to-74-year-old women, which in many in cases is a kind of golden age. That's the time when these people generally have the same kind of health as people under age 65, have good incomes, and have the time to enjoy it.
You see 75 to 84 as kind of a transition phase. Then you really see in that 85-and-over population the kinds of problems we usually associate with old age: low incomes; living alone; needing social support. That's when it really comes in.
What's of concern right now is that it's a fairly small population in Canada right now, about 10% of the overall senior population, but it's the fastest-growing segment of the seniors population. And down the road—I forget the dates, but at some point in time, within two or three decades—we're going to have as many people in Canada over the age of 85 as we have seniors today.