I don't know if there's any jump-off point in the sense that at a certain point you give up. But I know from work I've done previously and from different projects, when we start looking at the health and well-being of the children and we work with the young families and the young teenagers, we make change, right? Because we're working with everybody--boys and girls. That's where I think we can make the best headway and have the greatest impact. I say that in the sense that in the work I've done, I've seen it in the reduction of suicide in youth.
I've seen a change when we work with the really young, but we can't ignore what's going on. That's what I mean about a whole person. We have to look after them spiritually, emotionally, physically, and mentally, from birth to death, lifelong, and we have to find ways to create the greatest impact throughout that spectrum in any place we live or any place we find our women or our children.
I don't know if there's a jump-off point, but Shelagh is probably better....