The example I can give—it's currently being researched for its impact—is from northern Ontario, where first nation communities purchased Suboxone because it was easier to manage and also provided land-based treatment. Out on the land, returning to culture, working with elders, such culture-specific interventions as sweat lodge ceremonies, the use of natural medicines for withdrawal management—those are all examples of that holistic approach. It attends to the individual within their family and their whole community, their connection to their land, their connection to their identity, their connection to culture, and it manages as well the physical symptoms with withdrawal.
That has also been followed up with reintegration back into the community by helping those individuals find meaningful roles within the family and the community so that they're contributing. There might not be enough economy to support employment, but if they can find ways to volunteer and contribute back to communities, they've found some success.