I think we're learning a lot about that; it's a very promising practice.
I think for sure it would help workers on all the front lines, including the grocery store, to have a test that we could turn around quite quickly. There certainly is a concern from nurses about getting COVID. In reality, places like hospitals, where things are pretty tight now around PPE, are some of the safer places to be. It's more on the margins. It's in home care and some of those places that we hear that concern.
The mental health issues we're hearing are somewhat bad—there's no question—but it's an awful lot about compounding grief and absolute fatigue. There are nursing homes where people haven't left for 14 days in a row of 12-hour shifts. It's a human fatigue issue. A lot of the fear around wondering if they're going to catch it is the fear that they are going to transmit it to their family. We're hearing those issues. I think everything governments can do to get us rapid testing as quickly as possible would be good.