Thank you for your question. It's an important one.
A number of things need to line up in order for a violent act to escalate to the level where the legislation would take effect. We need to remember that the incident needs to be reported. It needs to be reported to the police. The police need to investigate. The threshold of criminality needs to be met, and then the case needs to be brought before a judge. Therefore, there are multiple points along this journey where that system and that chain, I think, can falter.
What we do see in the data is that a large portion of the incidents are not felt to meet that threshold that warrants reporting it to the police or at which the police feel it warrants being brought for criminal prosecution. I think it is illustrating the harms that this sort of exposure has for our colleagues. I think it is illustrating the importance on a societal level of protecting our members to make sure we can provide life-saving care. I think with those things we'll see meaningful change.