That was one of the key treaters of our veterans from that conflict.
Now, when it comes to suicide in the north, there's an epidemic of suicide up there. There's one statistic that I note from the north. When you look at the per capita expenditures on health throughout the north, especially in Nunavut, per capita expenditures on drugs are less than half the national average. The national average is between $1,000 and $1,200. In Nunavut, it's between $400 and $600.
Has any work been done on the correlation for remote and isolated communities where they simply have no access to the kinds of drugs you're talking about? They have no access, no follow-up, and no kind of treatment at all. Could we recognize that as a potential problem in this epidemic of suicide, where the rates in Nunavut are 10 times the national average?