I would like to see several things.
First of all, I think there has to be funding. Robert has mentioned it. I think we've all mentioned it. That was part of what this G-8 was supposed to be about. It was not supposed to be a question of what maternal health is but rather a question of how we fund it.
I think it also has to be integrated. It's really important that we not all go off on different tangents. For instance, on micronutrients and nutrition, Canada is known as a world leader. It makes sense for us to play a leadership role. But that is an add-on. That is something in addition to.
We're talking, in a sense, about two different kinds of things. We're talking about maternal health, which is basically medical care. We are talking about training people, which again, the development minister has mentioned is something that will be a priority. That has to be there. We have to have systems within which all of this can happen.
We have to have access to family planning in all its manifestations. We have to recognize, I believe, and respect, the whole history and the historical places that brought us to where we are with respect to sexual and reproductive health. And as Secretary Clinton has made quite clear, you can't talk about women's sexual and reproductive lives without also being conscious that there will be times when abortion is necessary.
We know that it kills women. We know that it's controversial. We know that there are many religious groups who really object to it. But if I were putting this together, that is what I hope would be included.