We would do the sex- and gender-based analysis in terms of identifying what the population at risk is and what the differences are. With suicide, to pick up on that one as an example, we know that boys are committing suicide more, but in fact, girls express suicidal ideation and have more attempts than boys do. We would collect that kind of data, and then it's up to whoever is the policy lead to ask what that tells us and what we look at.
Sometimes it's about making sure that there's an equitable approach within the policy. Sometimes it's because there's a crisis, like in the case of particularly boys in the north committing suicide. We need to understand what's going on there that's different from suicide among youth generally. For sure, we would look at that. I don't know if that answered your question.