I think we've touched upon some of these things in some of the comments. For example, the highest-risk group for suicide is middle-aged men. Middle-aged men call suicide prevention help lines less often. They don't talk to their doctors about feeling depressed. If they seek mental health services, they wait until it's really severe instead of acting immediately. There's been research showing some public health campaigns with some of our male heroes doing what Denise Batters and others have done, that is, coming out and saying, “I was feeling depressed. I was feeling suicidal. I got help.” There's that sort of campaign, which the government does very well when it promotes exercise and other things.
The other area is in mental health promotion, which can start very young in life. Teenagers who kill themselves have a smaller number of coping mechanisms available to them when they're faced with difficult and stressful situations. This is something we don't teach. There are programs running around the world that have proven to be effective in helping children learn how to cope with everyday problems. So promoting these types of programs in schools can be very helpful.
Some of the things...they're just free. If you can buy only 10 Tylenol at a time, instead of getting a bottle of 50 or 100, you're going to save lives in Canada. And the drug companies will make more money. There are things the federal government can do at almost no cost, but it takes knowledgeable people who have the responsibility for making those sorts of proposals.