You mentioned there's a range of responses. You talked about some people going back to work earlier and getting a lot of support from their work environment, which helped them move through the grieving more quickly.
What do you see as the parameters of flexibility with respect to this? My wife and I went through a miscarriage late in a pregnancy. That was a significant issue. What would be the scope of identifying where and when people would be able to access supports provided by the state, given the flexibility and range of things? I've worked with families where grandparents were significantly impacted, and there are concerns with respect to that, and extended family members.
There's a wide range of impact with PTSD, and certainly you made reference to—in North America we use DSM-5, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, but, sir, PTSD and the response to this are very subjective. Each of us comes to it with a different set of understandings and a different set of challenges.
How would you look at the scope in terms of addressing them? How did you address them in the issues you made reference to, with the terrible shootings that took place? How did you deal with extended family, relatives, neighbours and friends? Is that part of the provisions you're looking at, or is it focused much more acutely?