Thank you for the question.
We're our own indigenous government, so we do provide these types of additional services to try to alleviate the demand on the health system within the region and the territory.
A lot of the medical staff here are transient. They will come up from one of the provinces. A doctor and even some nurses will come in on rotation for say eight weeks at a time, but when they go back to wherever they come from, they are continuing to work. Those demands and pressures are still on them on a daily basis. We're trying to provide other services, such as home care workers who can go into the households to check on the elderly or those who are in need of that type of service. We are able to provide that as well.
I also mentioned the counselling services. We have done that in the past and we have a lot of experience with providing that due to residential school issues. That's where we provided those supports.
We're looking at any and all means. Like I said, we're providing medical kits to the households as well—rubber gloves, masks, first aid kits, hand sanitizer. These are a part of these kits that we're trying to get into the households so that they are readily available to them as well. It is difficult at times to find some of this material, but we're trying to get as much as we can into each household.