Thank you for the question.
We have a great opportunity to collect data in Canada through Statistics Canada, and we don't take advantage of that. We have a lot of health surveys that are in place. Some are focused on children and children's health. We could very easily be putting indicators of violence and adverse experiences that children could have into those surveys. We can do that for adult surveys as well. This isn't a new thing to suggest.
Statistics Canada has some measures in some studies, but they're very limited. Sometimes, when the study comes up to run again, those measures are often the first to be pulled out and it sometimes becomes a big conversation about why we need them in there.
We have the infrastructure in place to easily collect that data. We need to understand the importance of it and recognize that countries all over the world collect very high-quality data in a very safe way, so Canada is behind in this. We need to have more data in Canada, so that we can make evidence-based decisions with Canadian data.