I think there are ways, and I think some people are working on those specific projections. Again, as this pandemic has continued, we know the rates of depression have increased further, and the rates of anxiety have increased further. It's one thing to be able to deal with a stressful situation for a short amount of time, but we know the cumulative effective of this type of scenario tends to continue to raise various rates of all sorts of different conditions.
Again, we know that those who are most under-serviced will probably be most impacted. Folks who already have medical and psychiatric conditions, folks who are already on the cusp of poverty, people who don't have access to those resources, people who are losing their jobs and don't have the financial resources otherwise—those populations will continue to get worse, as is the case for all of us. However, again, proportionally we know certain populations are likely to be more affected. Women seem to be at slightly increased risk over men at this point. As well, there are families with young children under the age of 18, those in marginalized communities, racialized people and members of our LGBTQ community, and people who are the most financially impacted.
We know which populations are at greatest risk. We know the rates are rising and we know that given the difficulty of predicting what's going to happen moving forward with this pandemic, rates of various mental health and addiction conditions will continue to rise.