I think the best reaction is similar to the one I recently saw from a bus. I saw a young man fall to his knees outside a metro station. A lady came up, knelt down with him and stayed with him. I feel that was the best possible reaction. It's the same thing at work. Sometimes, a person doesn't feel comfortable talking about it to all his co-workers, but he can confide in one person with whom he has a special relationship and talk to them about it. Then, if a seizure occurs, that person is going to be able to be there for him.
In terms of the general public, I think that education is the best thing. I was not expecting to take about that this morning, but it is a very good thing. There is no better place to talk about it than at the Standing Committee on Health. If we can talk to the government about it, and to the media—the people listening to us at the moment—that's significant. Everyone wants to learn and we are continuing to develop good attitudes of compassion, understanding and caring.
So the worst reaction is the one from well-intentioned people that I once saw on another bus. One person had a seizure and everyone wanted to help. Everyone was giving advice on what should be done and that's not always the best thing. Some people were handing the person a bottle of water, and so on. You could see that there was a lot of compassion on the part of the people who wanted to help, but it was not always in the best way. So the most harmful reaction is to jump in and crowd around the person. When the person having the seizure comes to, it can cause them to panic.