Madam Chair, that is really a super question, because it allows me to talk about something that I feel is really important.
The first thing, I'm afraid, is that I am not going to share the 2020 numbers with you today. Those numbers will absolutely be made public at the end of the year.
We deliberately delay releasing some of that information because of some of the privacy concerns, which we've already alluded to in other questions. We are such a small population, and although each and every suicide obviously has a tremendous impact on family, friends and colleagues, in the end our numbers are quite small, so we would expect a variation from year to year in our small population in the numbers of suicides.
For me, it is not about the number of suicides in any given year. That is not, I don't think, how we should look at whether our suicide prevention efforts are working, because we expect that fluctuation, so it's not about chasing the number. Even if I were to tell you today that the numbers for 2020 were much better than in another year or much worse than in another year, we would still do everything we could to prevent every suicide we could, although acknowledging that we cannot prevent or predict every single one. To me, I think it's important that—