Thank you for your question.
I think Canada is very well placed, actually, to take the long-standing programs that the Canadian government has been investing in for the last 10 years and start to build their digital capacity to deliver their work online.
I mentioned some of our findings from a study that we ran five years ago, which was looking at what was then the current level of digital capacity among Canadian prevention practitioners, and it was very low. We need to work to improve that, so I would suggest that the Canadian government work to deliver training and capacity building to organizations that need to start using social media to signpost their services online.
I would also suggest that we start to look at large-scale programming across the entire country, and not just focus on the few territories and provinces that have been heavily invested in and already have these programs on the ground but also really start to look at parts of the country that don't have these programs—in particular, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, the Atlantic provinces and the territories. We need to build up specialist teams that can cater to audiences that are at risk in those regions and start to bring services for those audiences online.