There are two solitudes that we are trying to connect at this point. T
here's the world of mild traumatic brain injury, which is often the term used to describe those concussions that occur in non-sport contexts. The definition of that is linked to some objective criteria, such as loss of memory, loss of consciousness, things like that. It's a challenge to get people comfortable with the management of that kind of injury, the recognition of it, in non-sport contexts as much as it is in sports-related contexts. There's a lot of work to do. We often see people who get a hip injury, and the concussion that comes with it is not identified. We need to do better with all of those cases.
There is no scientific indication that the physiopathology of the injury is different if you get hit by a soccer ball or you fall on the ice. It's the same problem, and we need to do better on both fronts. I'm not aware that there is specifically a strategy to address that as a public health issue, but there certainly are grounds, in the numbers I gave you, for addressing it in a stepwise manner, starting with primary care. In so many of those cases, if you do the basic simple stuff, they will heal, just by keeping them safe and having them gradually resume their activities.
That can be the basis.