I can. Insofar as forced treatment is a huge issue, particularly for women with a mental health disability, there are so many dimensions to that. We could spend an entire other committee, I'm sure, just on that issue. Electric shock treatment is one of the ones that I think is probably best known to people in terms of forced treatment and that issue for women with mental health problems.
The other thing—and I know you didn't ask about but I wanted to say something on it—is it's really important for people to think about this in the context that you have.... Again, DAWN is a cross-disability organization and what we really hope, and again, what our written brief will reflect, is that these are disabilities already. The mental health disability of these eating disorders exists, in addition to which it's important to understand that there's a whole other perspective that you need to understand from the perspective of women with physical disabilities.
I appreciate very much the question around the treatment issue, Niki, and like I said, it's one issue, but the larger issue is still the attitudinal and physical and all the barriers that women with disabilities are facing in terms of just getting treatment and being recognized as the most high-risk group, in fact, of women for eating disorders.