Yes. I think the phrase you pointed to at the end, MP Hanley, is one of the most important ones. Some of our children don't.... Our children are not equal, and those living in families with lower incomes particularly struggle when they need to access dental care.
Just to give you a quick figure, if we cut the population into three pieces and look at the third-lowest income, the population with children, they have two-thirds of the cavities and emergency dental care needs of the population. You see how unequally distributed dental care conditions and, therefore, the dental care needs are across our children.
Let's start by acknowledging that—the impacts on those who live in families with lower incomes and those whose parents don't have access to private dental insurance. We need to acknowledge that. As we acknowledge that together, we can focus on how we can help those families look after their children. That's their objective. That's our objective, I believe, as policy-makers as well.