With regard to torture and human trafficking, the only place we know of that took on the model we created is the London Abused Women's Centre.
Other than that, we have emails. I answered an email this week from a woman whose daughter was tortured in trafficking. I had to tell her that, where she lives in Canada, there's no one I know of who can help—not in the way she needs.
I want to tell you some of the reasons why victimization- and trauma-informed care is so important. Things disappear. People stop being suicidal. They stop being triggered. They stop disassociating. They're able to sleep at night. They go off medication. They go off disability. They get a quality of life where they can have fun and joy, and just be free to be themselves.
I know it's hard to read at night, Anna, but the story is a good story. It's a positive story if we embrace their reality and know that, if they can heal from torture, they can heal from anything. It's the worst crime on the face of the earth. There's no place for them in this country yet, because we don't have the law. Of course, because we don't have a law, we don't have the care they need and deserve.