Senator REYNOLDS (Western Australia—Minister for the National Disability Insurance Scheme and Minister for Government Services) (14:59): In relation, first of all, to the under-12 children with disability, as the senator would know, no country in the world has vaccinations yet for under-12s. In relation to 12- to 15-year-olds— The PRESIDENT: Are you raising a point of order, Senator O'Neill? Senator O'Neill: Yes. Just because there was a little lack of clarity, I'll ask the question again. It wasn't about— The PRESIDENT: No, Senator O'Neill; I'm sorry. The minister asked you to clarify. The question was, 'How many children with disability have had a first dose of the vaccine?' The minister is being directly relevant by answering the question in the form she is. I can't instruct her how to answer. It's not long till the debate on questions after question time. Senator REYNOLDS: Thank you very much, Mr President. That's why I sought the clarification, because, obviously, there are different cohorts of children's ages. However, if the senator is referring to 12- to 15-year-olds, I can confirm that this week I confirmed publicly that all participants aged 12 to 15, of whom there are 48,308, were now eligible for the Pfizer vaccination nationwide. Since that announcement—it opened yesterday—we have had already over 1,056 participants in this cohort receive a vaccination. The PRESIDENT: Senator O'Neill, a supplementary question?