That's a great question.
I'm always taken aback when I hear some of the data in this space. You and I are very conversant with the facts that half of adult residents in Peel report living with a chronic health condition, that South Asians in particular are 15% to 20% more likely to develop diabetes and that the diabetes risk amongst Black women has skyrocketed over recent years.
There is programming within the post-secondary sector at both the college and the university level that's really focused on education and awareness campaigns, on adjusting perspective but also lifestyle. Across the continuum of care, we need to get people moving. We need to support people in exercising. Our programs in kinesiology, athletic therapy and osteopathy, for example, are all really intended to support residents before they're diagnosed with chronicity, or certainly afterwards.
I think that colleges, institutes, polytechnics and universities can work collaboratively to make sure we have the right talent to be proactive and upstream in resourcing the system—hopefully, before it becomes overburdened.