Thank you.
I'm going to try to get a couple more questions in, so I'm going to ask you to end there. Thank you.
I'd like to focus for a second on psychosocial causes. We know that the fashion industry, the clothing industry, is fixated on thin models, models who are artificially thin. Many of them diet severely in a highly competitive profession. Some of them smoke tobacco, or do cocaine, or actually do heroin in order to keep their weight down.
I was shocked to find out about eight years ago that in some of the images in magazines that girls see, the models are made up to look like they're on cocaine or on heroin. That's some kind of style or something.
It was naive of me, I guess, but I discovered—also years ago—that some women's clothing stores don't sell sizes for girls who aren't small. I thought that was pretty mean-spirited. That's kind of reckless, with a disregard for the mental health and the happiness of those who could be their customers. They have these great styles and they have these great labels, but if your BMI is average or higher, you can't buy those clothes.
Do you have any ideas for the fashion industry or the magazine industry, or suggestions that we might make, that they might do cooperatively? Because they have loved ones who might suffer from eating disorders, and they want to help deal with it too. Are there things they might do to reduce this negative influence, this artificial influence on girls with regard to their body image?