All right. Thank you.
Dr. Rolland-Harris, this has been touched on in a couple of questions so far. We talked about tracking the female suicides.
I'm a physician. I've had to learn statistics, and I know the challenges of analyzing data when the numbers are small. I think we both agree it's fortunate that the numbers are small, but it does cause that challenge.
In medicine in general we've had an issue over the years where so much medical research has been gender-based, usually towards males, right from basic science research onward. I was a medical researcher before I was a physician. We always used male rats, because if you used two genders there was too much variation. Hence, you develop medications that might not work for females. Although I understand that putting it in a report is one thing, because, as I say, the numbers are so low you might identify....
Are you looking at methods that can better analyze and maybe get more conclusions from the female population, where it's so challenging?