In terms of the first part of your question on whether it has been helpful to people within certain organizations or nationally, I do think that it has been helpful. I think it has been very helpful, just by simply looking at the number of people who have accessed this service. I can't give you the specific number. I think Ms. Bradley mentioned earlier that it was over 500,000. I believe it's actually closer to 800,000 or so at this point, but I could be mistaken on that. We know that quite a number of Canadians have accessed that resource.
Again, in trying to provide the most appropriate level of care based on that individual's needs, whether it's connecting with certain online resources for education, iCBT, peer support or up to four sessions of one-to-one counselling virtually, we know that many Canadians have benefited from this service, but we know that it can only go so far. Again, if certain people have more severe conditions, that's when this service starts to be insufficient.
In terms of what I would do first, again, in terms of what can be done right away, I think the co-operation of various colleges across Canada can happen very quickly, and it would very suddenly increase access for a whole lot of Canadians to psychiatrists, other physicians, psychologists and other mental health professionals if we were able to break down those interprovincial boundaries.