I mentioned that it's also been exhausting for our teachers. The midwives are so consumed with the extra work that goes into keeping safe: maintaining their safety and ensuring the safety of the people they're caring for and the colleagues they work with and their families. There are midwives who aren't living at home because they feel it's unsafe to come into their home environment. They're living in a segregated space so they can keep their families safe. It's just too much to take a student into, so the impact of COVID on the education program has been devastating.
We have concerns right now—I guess I can say this—about the ability to provide enough placements for our second-year students at the University of British Columbia. Right now, we're reconfiguring the way we're delivering our programs so that we can meet the learning objectives, but we're being very creative in how we do it. This is the first time that we've had to do something like this.