I certainly appreciate that answer, and I think the second part is really what gives us some guidance in terms of where the gaps are. I hear your point on looking at the totality of the Canadian population.
We did hear from Dr. Woodside, who's a specialist in this area, last week. He asked whether it is coincidental that it's mostly women who suffer eating disorders and yet there is overall so little attention in terms of a national strategy, in terms of awareness that this is a very important issue. In fact, he equated the number of people who face prostate cancer, obviously men, to the similar numbers of people who experience eating disorders. Yet we have these huge campaigns—Movember. There's research, there's awareness around prostate cancer. Yet we certainly don't see the same when it comes to eating disorders.
For us it really causes one to ask the question around conditions that women face that put them in a position where they're more likely to suffer from an eating disorder—conditions of patriarchy or inequality. Perhaps your team could elaborate how eating disorders or diseases or illnesses that affect women disproportionately intersect with the issue of women's inequality.