Okay. Thank you.
I mentioned the naloxone or the detox, making sure that it's not just addressing their overdose problem but linking that to housing and employment, and so on.
One of the things that's a challenge for us here in Oregon is that while we have some urban centres such as Portland and what we call the I-5 corridor or the Willamette Valley, parts of the state are extremely rural. Some of the folks living in those parts of the state have a lot of difficulty accessing treatment facilities, but even accessing alternative treatments for their pain. Acupuncture, for example, or massage is very hard to come by in some of the more rural parts of the state.
I would agree again that what we know is best, if you have data on reporting not only what's happening with death but overdoses. We wish we had better toxicology screening so we could understand the combination, and then really using that data to help drive immediate programs, the overdose prevention, but to address some of the upstream factors that are causing people to use the drugs in the first place.
Thank you.