I think you raise an excellent point. Health happens in a lot of places, not just in hospitals and not just in doctors' offices and schools.
One of the things we've often suggested in terms of the best deployment of psychologists' skills...and, like psychiatrists, we're only one member of a large team. It might be a social worker or a peer support worker or so on who's the best person for the problem. But really, it's at the front end and knowing what the problem is...I think it's really critical to have the expertise of someone who can assess and diagnose, to know where the person should be triaged, and then there's great room in the middle for a lot of care and a lot of kinds of providers.
Psychologists do work in schools. The challenge is that schools face funding pressures. There are fewer and fewer resources. People don't want to wait a year and a half on a waiting list to have their child's learning disability assessed, or whatever it is, and then go to the private sector, and then there may be some breakdown in communication back with the public sector.
But I think you raise an excellent point.