Unfortunately, I would put a caveat on that as well: Sometimes, even when people are in crisis, they still do not get the help. You mentioned that we have advocates. If somebody has an advocate, they may be able to navigate the system. I'm not going to go into my personal situation, but I had a personal situation this year. It was a women's health issue, and I could not navigate the system—and I run a women's mental health clinic. I was left for three months. So, it doesn't matter if you have an advocate or not. The system is very difficult to navigate.
I think that having some kind of standardized community meetings where we come together and learn about different organizations and what's actually available in our community could be really helpful. I hear of services that are underutilized because we know about the popular top-funded ones. They have wait-lists that are a mile long, and then we have other services that are underutilized.
I think if we started to have conversations and actually knew what was out there, what is available to us, that could make it easier to access that.
I don't know if Michelle wants to add anything.