Following up on Laila's question, I'm going to ask a somewhat similar question.
Dr. Black, you talked about what to do with children who have both mental health issues and were suicidal. Somewhere in there was also addictions, because you were responding to the problem of addictions. As I think you know, a lot of overdoses in youth are by people who don't necessarily have mental health problems.
We're studying children's health. I have a lot of kids, but I have a 12-year-old and a 14-year-old, and I think for most of us who have teenage children, one of our biggest fears in terms of their health is that they're going to overdose.
It's not that my kids seem likely to do it. However, when you're a teenager these days and drinking in a place like Thunder Bay, which I hear—I don't know if it's true—has a higher per capita rate of overdose deaths than Vancouver even, there's certainly a concern that at some party they're going to do something. All it takes is one time. The stuff they're doing is laced with fentanyl, and that's it.
What can both of you tell us as to what parents, teachers, schools or governments can do in order to address this problem to try to prevent overdoses amongst youth?