When we talk about these approaches, often they are places that have had linkages between sectors that haven't traditionally worked together. They're places where you'll see law enforcement and health working together, or where you'll see cities working with families and different pieces.
A couple come to mind. Iceland, for example, tackled very high rates of alcohol use among its youth. Really, what they were able to do was make it everyone's problem. It wasn't just experts. It wasn't just specialists. It was parents. It was schoolteachers. Everyone felt they had a role, when they woke up in the morning, in contributing to the reductions of the harm. It was very successful.
In France, during a heroin epidemic in the nineties, again, they kind of made it everyone's problem. Every prescriber was taught how to use Suboxone and how to do these different things.
We've actually found, through some of our recent conferences and different pieces, that with the right supports, you can put people with diverse ideas in the same room as long as they're feeling like they're moving forward and as long as they're feeling engaged. I think a lot of the anger and frustration we're hearing from community members is actually a desire to be more involved in the process. People want to be involved in what is happening in their communities, but they also want to be involved in the solutions.