I think the best intervention has been peer support programs. I developed, I think, one of the first ones 20 years ago for indigenous post-secondary, and then UNBC took it on. They've been training people, and I think they even have an annual conference now. It's indigenous peer support that's university based.
For me, that was my outreach. That got me my business. If I was working as a university counsellor, my business came from the peer support students because they were trained to identify, not to provide therapy, but how to refer and who to refer to. People who would never come and see me would end up on my doorstep with the peer support person who brought them there to see me.
It was tremendous outreach, because students tend to talk to other students first. That same model could be used, and I've used it, actually, in a high school in Whitehorse. There were no completed suicides the three years that I ran that because it was specifically to address suicide prevention. I think that's a really underutilized resource, but the universities are picking it up.