The exercise of monitoring is always helpful. When someone asks me at the end of the day what I've achieved and I have to come up with something, it really makes me think twice about what I'm doing and what I'm accomplishing. There's a certain self-interest and motivation there, to be sure, but to be frank, we have been monitoring more the use and application of the policy.
As much as I appreciate the compliments to Health Canada, we're probably still very much in our infancy. We've done I think a pretty good job in terms of embedding the practice, of getting it to be more routine terms of applying it. We don't get a lot of questions from people about why they have to do this, but on the quality of how that sex- and gender-based analysis is done, or the impact of those outcomes, which in Health we'll sometimes see years and years down the road, if at all, that's much more difficult to measure.