In terms of where we are, in our brief, I think we've identified that we think the top intervention in terms of addressing maternal and child health both—this, I think, is echoed in the brief of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health—is access to health services and skilled health attendants along the continuum of care, including front line health workers, but all along the continuum of care.
We've highlighted front line health workers as an entry point for Canada, and that certainly is highlighted within the partnership's manifesto as well. In fact, I think they call for a million skilled and trained front line health workers as an actual numeric target.
In terms of the interventions that address child survival and child mortality, the four leading killers of children are pneumonia, malaria, diarrhea, and an underlying cause in malnutrition. What we're suggesting is that you can't really isolate what the interventions are. We've been advocating for an integrated bundle of interventions that would be delivered to treat the whole patient.