It will most definitely, for all the reasons I just cited, instead of mental health being that thing over there that you deal with maybe once a year when you talk about talking. That's not in any way to take away from that campaign; I was a Bell Let's Talk ambassador for many years. But that's just to say that conversations about mental health have to be something that permeate not just our lives but also our institutions and the way we look after one another and the way our health care services look after people. That will go a long way to taking away some of the stigma.
One of the things I always said as a Bell Let's Talk ambassador was that we're drawing people into the light, and it is an incredible thing to have them come out and talk about what they are going through. I know this myself through what I went through. But to have them in the light and then to not have the supports and services there for them when they are exposed and open would be criminal.
We have to get better. It's a massive undertaking and it will take time, but there are huge leaps we can take, and I think the importance of including it in occupational health and safety has to do with more than just the substance of it; it's also the symbolic nature of it. It's incredibly important.