I didn't have much time to respond to that question, so I appreciate the follow-up. With respect to some of the groups that are made more vulnerable, we don't have that data covered by Statistics Canada. For example, if we look at the homicide survey, it collects only basic information. At the point of the investigation, the police fill out the report, and that's submitted to Statistics Canada. There is no follow-up with the data to add information that might have come out through the court process.
We do have domestic violence death review committees, which is one way to capture data, which has been an advance for us. But that data doesn't capture all types of femicides, but only those that occur in the context of intimate partner violence. Clearly, we don't have those across the country, so we still have a data gap.
They've been much better at collecting information on women with disabilities and racialized women, because they're extracting data from multiple sources, and it's a multisectoral group, which is quite representative of the public health framework that we support.