A really blunt comment is that our staff tell me that we've lost five young people to overdoses over the past few weeks. That level of loss is.... There's no comparison to our previous history.
Most of that would have been unintentional. It would have been daily use that escalated as a coping strategy. Certainly drug and alcohol use, substance abuse, has gone up.
What's really become even more important for us are those daily connections, so I mentioned our housing team briefly in the answer to the last question. To elaborate a little bit on that, we're still knocking on doors of young people who live in our buildings on an almost-daily basis. We have a daily breakfast program that's now a bagged program, so it's limited in terms of all the protocols, of course, that underline everything. But it's really important that we're still that touch space for people, because that level of isolation for people who are already feeling marginalized and outside of the community is just profound. Anxiety levels are up. Depression levels are up, and of course I mentioned that some of the evidence of that is loss of life. It's profound.