We certainly approach this from a multi-pronged approach, as our previous speaker has just identified. There is no one answer that's going to be a silver bullet here. Certainly, it's going to take everyone working together.
On your point about education, we know clearly from people with dementia and their families that they will often get to a long-term care home quite late in their disease process without ever really having understood and been told clearly what their disease is and what their trajectory is likely to be. We really need to have every opportunity to have conversations as collaborative team members among staff, residents or clients, and families, including the residents and family councils that exist in many organizations. It's when we get everybody together and start to very transparently look at these problems, without blaming, that we can actually get somewhere in terms of creative strategies.
I think many of us today have said very common things. There's not one approach that's going to work. Education is not going to be the whole answer. Structural changes, I would put, are not the whole answer either, because tomorrow we still have people working in these fields who can do a better job of approaching, in our instance, people with dementia. So, it is going to take a multi-pronged approach. To your point, I would say it takes everyone's heads coming together.