That's the million-dollar question. In the 2014 report on eating disorders of women and girls, one of the witnesses said that if eating disorders were an illness that affected men like prostate cancer, there would be an eating disorders clinic on every street corner. I think it's valuable for us to take a gender equity lens to this issue and know that it impacts predominantly women and girls. Although, of course, it has impacted men and boys as well, it's seen as an illness that impacts girls and women, and it is seen as a feminine behaviour that stems from looking at Instagram too much and just not loving our bodies enough.
We've reduced it to an individual problem that girls just need to grow out of, snap out of and eat a sandwich. We've heard all of this. These are such complicated, metabolically and biologically driven, complex illnesses. I think we have been delaying taking action because of the lack of a gender equity lens to approaching eating disorders and because they are very complex. There isn't a one-size-fits-all solution to this.