Yes, absolutely we can follow up with numbers on that. We know that eating disorders generally tend to start in adolescence, but for a variety of reasons, including lack of access to treatment, people still have them in mid-life and late life.
This isn't an illness that appears in adolescence and then disappears when they hit a magic number. We have a lot of folks within Canada who are currently adults and seniors and are still struggling with an eating disorder. We're also seeing disproportionate numbers of folks who are food-insecure and facing eating disorders.
Again, they're really complicated issues, but often they're connected to tremendous distress and lack of food availability.