Thank you very much. We had some very good conversations at the round table around prevention. A couple of key points came out of that. The first point was on early intervention, just to support Doctor Lanius' comment that the earlier we can put prevention in place, obviously, the more longer-term positive impact that can have. So our strategy has to involve targeting the front end of any kind of strategy even including the national action plan in terms of PTSD. It would look at everything from what we put in place with respect to recruiting front-line safety officers to how we support families and friends.
I can use a quick analogy. When someone is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, not just one person is impacted. It's also the people around them. If you throw a rock into the water, you have this big ripple effect. Often you see that in people who are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder; it affects their wife, their children, or whoever that happens to be. So prevention also has to include people who are in that surrounding community. It can also include those others who are touched by that.
We had a question earlier about trauma that happens in the workplace. Prevention should not just be specific to that person but should be on a continuum involving those people who could potentially be impacted, looking at immediacy at the front end and then building that as part of the strategy going forward.