Sure. Thank you for the question.
There were some resounding themes as the module was being developed. They decided, as I mentioned before, to go very case-based, because that's where the meat of the matter is. They facilitated discussions so that the people who were teaching were actually subject experts in the area who could lead people through a very nuanced conversation that deals with capacity, voluntariness, irremediableness, the structural vulnerabilities that Dr. Downie mentioned in the last session, and then the concept that Dr. Green was talking about of whether the patient is suicidal or actually has a reason to wish to die, which is not the same thing.
All of those areas where clinicians struggle are basically the meat and potatoes, if you will, of the different cases in the training module, going from fairly simple to more and more complex. This is recognizing that there are probably more complex cases still, and the modules will be reviewed, evaluated and upgraded over time to reflect current practice and may include other examples going forward.