Sure. Thank you for the question.
I think of it in two directions. One direction is that if we think about where people seek help when they are dealing with emotional health or mental health problems, we want to be thinking about how that care is tailored to the needs of specific populations. I think I said at the end of my comments that we need women-centred spaces and girl-centred spaces. However, we need spaces that are also BIPOC-centred spaces, so that a Black woman has the opportunity to be in a service where she knows that people understand the issues of Black women and girls and that she's going to meet practitioners who represent that population or have deep knowledge of that population.
The other half of that is the health promotion component. In terms of health promotion, I go back to what you just said. There are populations that are dealing with collective trauma and stress because the world is not safe for certain populations—certain groups of women and girls. We need to think about health promotion that deals with that kind of collective trauma and stress. Also, there's the cumulative trauma and stress. If you look at the research, you see that women of colour, sexual minority women and gender minority women have histories of lifetimes of exposure to violence and trauma. Part of what is difficult in our system is that it's not ready for them when they are ready and able to actually deal with that work and in turn deal with those traumas.
In terms of best practices for treating traumas, we know you need regular supports, community supports, connection and this kind of thing. We don't have a system that's built to deal with that. We have a system that has a one-size-fits-all approach, which I'm frankly not even sure fits anyone anymore. However, certainly for Black or indigenous people, people of colour, or women and girls, it's not a good fit.