Thank you for the question.
I hope I've understood your question. I will try to answer it.
I think the approach to the social determinants, as I think you're alluding to, is going to be the most important way out of this crisis. I'm not convinced that we're never going to have a drug crisis. The reason is as I said: At the very beginning, humans have desires, and we're risk-takers, so a supply-side approach is never going to work. We've demonstrated that for the last 60 years. Unless we get rid of our fundamental biases in this, we're not going to overcome the situation.
Why housing is really important, as I've alluded to, is that it gives you personhood, and without that, there is no motivation for you to change. I can't change somebody. I can only help them try to change, but if they don't want to change or cannot find it in them to change with everything around them, I can't change that. That's a fundamental truth that I have to accept. As a physician, I can't fix everything. I can do my best, but I can't fix everything.