Yes, I think the peer support and the ongoing peer interactions are pretty critical. Again, I think we need to do some additional research to provide you with some data to answer those questions, because the kinds of traumatic exposure are different—not better or worse, but different because it's prolonged.
They need to be better able to manage uncertainty. They need to be better able to manage ongoing states of low-level stress. There's been long-standing research showing that daily hassles, for example, in the general community cause more and more distress than big and significant issues. Big and significant issues certainly are important, but those daily hassles that sort of edge on us, day in, day out, also have a significant impact.
For our public safety personnel who live that—and for them, the daily hassles are in some cases traumatic stress injuries—we need to come up with better solutions. They need to be different. We're really talking about building better teams. I think peer support will be important, but we don't have a lot of research to know what kinds, in what doses, and in what ways.
So yes to peer support, but we also need a broader, different set of solutions to deal with these kinds of ongoing exposures.