Thank you so much for the question.
I would just say that isolation is largely leading to that. The roots of that are complex. The whittling down of community spaces is a really big part of that.
Tyler Boyce was talking about connecting with people outside of your own demographic. There are a lot of examples of this. Those spaces and those opportunities are fewer and fewer for people. Especially for youth who may have gone to school virtually for the majority of their high school experience, etc., it's becoming more and more difficult. Social services don't have funding, so there's less opportunity for things like volunteering or summer jobs and things like that. It's harder for them to get those kinds of connections and make real relationships, I would say.