I think the big point in our context in particular, just in terms of adult smoking among our people in Atlantic Canada, is that it's at 64%. That is way higher than anywhere else in the country. Diabetes and those kinds of diseases, in most scenarios, take years and years to impact people, but I've seen cases where somebody gets diabetes in a community and two months later the person is dead. So the impacts are direct and the outcomes are quick.
In terms of the impact of the narrowing of the types of services provided, it just gets more and more people into negative outcomes in the communities. That's why our focus today is towards an economy and building an economy, so we can get out of that cycle and move from poverty to greater well-being in terms of our whole community and we can have a better outlook for the future.