It reminds of one thing I could talk to you about, which is that I think there's a notion in Canada that if you have your own apartment and you can call yourself independent, that's the highest good, and in a way the whole notion of supported housing is more a connected one.
Also, in what I've gathered of aboriginal approaches to mental health, when we attended a panel a couple of weeks ago the whole idea that people who might be living rough will “get better” if they're put into an apartment somewhere, they were like, “No”. This doesn't apply to everybody—please—but some people actually like the old way of life of not having to have a fixed address. I feel this is very dangerous territory, because I'm not advocating that in general, but on the idea that a sort of white-bread notion of having your own apartment is the solution, that is not the solution. So a more connected one that involves more discussion, as you say, is helpful.