Thank you very much.
I want to change the channel a bit and talk about seniors who have mobility problems. Many seniors have mobility problems, for one reason or another. There's a sense as well that if you move these seniors from their homes and put them into an institution or long-term care facilities, you actually increase the rapidity of them getting memory loss and Alzheimer's and disorientation and all of those kinds of things.
How, then, can one ensure that elderly mobility-challenged people can stay in their own homes, especially if these homes are not easily accessible? What sorts of changes do you see that wouldn't be very costly? You would have to change every single home, or every single unit of every single apartment in a community, if you wanted to improve their mobility without having to remove them to an institutional setting that has mobility access. How do you see that happening?
Today at the research caucus lunch, the woman from the United Kingdom was telling us that part of the multidisciplinary team they use in managing chronic care includes a housing person and a social worker. When we talk about multidisciplinary teams, we don't think about these two people.
Can you elaborate on that and tell us what model you think we could use?