Thank you so much for the question. I acknowledge that to be true. Often there is a direct correlation between those who have suffered the most and those who are in the worst state of mental health. Sometimes when somebody has a mental illness—which, again, is different—it can certainly be greatly exacerbated by trauma or by those very difficult circumstances of which you speak.
One of the reasons I think we need time is that we need to make sure we get that line exactly right. To the point you're making, we don't want to wind up in a circumstance where somebody has a mental illness and they push, and there was something we could have done.
We have to exhaust everything, and it can really only be at the end of the road, after we have tried everything. If we have been unable to find a solution, then I think we're left with the question of what we as a society can do if somebody has tried absolutely everything and is at the end of their rope in terms of pain and they wish, of their own volition, to end that. It's a complicated and difficult question. That's why I think we have to take time.
However, I acknowledge the circumstances you're taking about. That's one reason I said at the outset that I think those conversations with many of those disadvantaged communities are so essential, to make sure they are fully comfortable that the controls are in place and that we're proceeding in the appropriate way.