I have lots of ideas.
I actually worked in a lockdown unit in a long-term care facility—I'm specialized in mental health and dementia—and I had my nose broken by an 80-pound old lady, who threw me across the room. I was alone on an overnight shift, and I was one worker with 32 residents. The public, in general, believe that at night, people go to sleep. Unfortunately, there's something called sundowning. That happens when people have dementia. On an overnight shift, in a lockdown unit in long-term care, at least half of the residents will be awake, wandering the halls and having behaviours at that time.
What really needs to be looked at is increasing staffing ratios on the overnight shift. Currently across Ontario—I can speak for New Brunswick as well, and a bunch of other provinces—it's one personal support worker or health care aide—whatever we want to call them right now—with up to 50 residents in a lockdown unit. You have a nurse. You're lucky if she or he is in the lockdown unit with you the whole time, because they have a huge job. It's a disaster, not waiting to happen, because it's happened in many different situations.