I don't have the direct statistics on those cases specifically, but what we see in Lethbridge is a combination of both rural and urban dynamics. We are surrounded by a huge farming community where firearms are available widely through that farming community. We have stigma that is absolutely there.
It's a smaller community. We're about 100,000 people. Everybody knows your name. We have those pieces. When it comes to isolation, even if those guns aren't specifically used on them in a form of violence, there's still the threat of violence. I think that's also really important, because that is a psychological threat that is there. It's very impactful on the individual in making that decision on whether they need to leave or have the capacity to leave.