That's very much so. This is a growing concern, probably more in the last few years than in the past.
If I go back to my own situation, when I started 31 years ago as a front-line correctional officer, if an incident occurred, it didn't matter how serious it was, you dealt with the incident. You were back at work the next day. It was just the culture. You just breathed it up and went on.
Today, as a result of all the good work the people have done around employee assistance, critical incident stress management, and the balance of work-family issues, it's not the case any more. Staff need the respite or the time away to heal.
One of my biggest concerns right now is dealing with issues that I would equate to post-traumatic stress disorder among some of our correctional officers, who are facing some of the most serious situations in our institutions. For that, we're starting to engage quite closely with the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, UCCO SACC CSN, and looking at what we could do collectively to try, for one thing, to recognize this issue, and two, to address it. But it's not an issue that this organization ever anticipated.