That's a very good question.
What is challenging is that we are discovering the vast number of ways brain injury happens, such as intimate partner violence. Dr. Paul van Donkelaar's study shows that, for every NHL player who suffers a concussion in the game of hockey, 5,500 Canadian women suffer the same type of brain injury. Whether you're in B.C. or Ontario, if you are one of those women and have never had medical support, never been to the hospital and never asked about head trauma, you're not going to get those supports.
That's the challenging piece we have right now. Yes, things are improving in some ways. We have smaller associations coming together to provide the community services and supports that we know work. However, they're not funded. They don't have core funding. Our provincial associations don't have core funding. It's about trying to keep up with the discoveries we have now in terms of how brain injury is happening. Often, I feel like we're running up and down the dam, trying to put our finger in there to stop it from exploding.
I think that's our bigger challenge right now. We're becoming aware. We can't become unaware of how these brain injuries are occurring.