Dr. Woodside, we're really pleased to have you here. I think we recognize there is not enough information out there and that we could advance the knowledge by having this study. It's great that you are able to be here. One of our Conservative members brought it to our attention.
I'm happy to be able to follow it through, too, because I have had quite a bit of association with Dr. April Elliott, whom you might know. She is the chief of adolescent medicine at Alberta Children's Hospital and deals with bulimia and anorexia.
I think you're in the process of trying to break down some of the myths here, and there appear to be a great many of them. I think that the public has no knowledge of the degree to which people are dying from anorexia. They do believe that it is a controllable urge. I think you've already started to change minds today by bringing some of this information forward.
I was interested in a couple of things that you said. One of them that just struck me is how we have a view in society that children's obesity is at some kind of crisis level, and you said that it isn't true. I wonder if you could explain why that is. Perhaps that's another of our issues.