I would say that what we're looking for from this meeting is to move forward. We need a serious commitment of funding, and we need it to be very clear that it's a multi-year commitment of significant funding.
The reality is that in order to deal with this issue from a systemic perspective, we have to build health care systems. That's a long-term investment to train professionals and health care workers and to support them in their work.
One year of funding, those sorts of conferences where people come together, pledge something, cut a cheque, and then the next year move on to the next issue, would be fatal. It would be irresponsible, and it would be unacceptable. Right? So we need a long-term commitment of significant funding to address this problem in a systemic and sustained way.
We clearly need an integrated approach. We need to deal with the reality of people's lives. Abortions are going to happen, but that isn't the question. The question is whether they are going to happen in hospitals or with medical attention for women who are not wealthy. We need to ensure that the system understands that this is one integral element of a broader approach and that to the extent that we deal with it properly, we will, in fact, minimize how often it happens and when it happens. And we will ensure that when it happens, it happens with the best possible outcome for everyone involved.
As I say, there are a number of elements of the package, but what I would stress is the magnitude, the long-term duration, and the integrated nature of that initiative.