Okay.
I want to talk a bit about family size. In North America, we've just celebrated 50 years of access to birth control, and family size has decreased considerably. It has meant economic security and health benefits. A recent study, in fact, indicated that women who had taken birth control have a greater life expectancy and are at decreased risk for some kinds of cancer. Most importantly, it has given them control over their own fertility. That's not the reality in the developing world in so many instances.
What is the impact of a large family on women, on the family unit, in terms of the resources available to the family unit? You've described some of the reality. There is virtually nothing in terms of resources. What impact does that have on children's susceptibility to malnutrition, disease, living in poor conditions when women cannot control the number of children they have through any means?