Let me start on that.
First of all, the Mental Health Commission is covering a range of things. We have a range of programs. We look at suicide prevention, the PTSD, as fleshing out that suite of programs. We think there is a real urgency to deal with the suicide prevention issue because of the very high levels of suicide in our indigenous communities. I think that is both a key driver from a mental health standpoint, but it's a real concern, if I can use the word, in a political sense. People understand the extent of it. It's five or six times the national average in these indigenous communities. There's a real desire on the part of people who are following this to address this particular issue.
We are starting by identifying 13 communities that are more prone to having suicides. There is a real focus on this, but we feel that as we roll this out in those 13 communities, there's an opportunity then to scale it up to cover the whole country.