What I would say is what we've heard from experts for many years. There has to be a coordination of care within communities. The communities have to play a critical role in this because that's where the problem is happening. It's different in different communities. In western Canada, there are opioids. In eastern Canada, amphetamines are a much bigger problem. The commonality is that they're all contaminated with fentanyl. A lot of that contamination with fentanyl is coming from organized crime. It is actually delivering that contamination within the country.
That said, we need a coordination of care. We have to overcome the fact that there are very few resources being provided for treatment and for harm reduction. We also have to combat the social determinants and the societal ills that are actually driving people to addiction.
What's critically important is that the stigma of illicit drug use is still overwhelming, including within the health system and within government itself. Until we destigmatize it, we have a significant challenge.