Just to reiterate, every community is doing different things. Many of our communities have just shut down their border. I think that this has been a good strategy, in that if your community is isolated, maybe the community can still be a community and still have some community events if you can keep it out that way.
That's a good thing in terms of the mental health aspect. If we can isolate it from our communities, then maybe our communities can still function in the way that we did and not be ethnically isolated from each other. There's that aspect.
The other thing that I think needs to be done is that we need to have more involvement of the health care system when it comes to communicating the who, when and where about people who are being confirmed positive. That was the biggest concern for many of our communities: If we have a community member who is sick, we would like to know. We don't need to know who it is, but we would like to know if the person is from one of our communities. That's kind of been an ongoing thing.
Thankfully, we haven't gotten to that point, but how fast the spread happens is probably what we're most concerned about. Should that occur, we would like to know immediately, so that we can respond properly. If you're not isolating quickly enough, it's not going to work. It doesn't matter how many isolation areas you have; if it's not done fast enough, it's just not going to work. That, I guess, is their biggest concern.