Thanks so much for that question.
I think one of the things that many survivors struggle with when they come forward is the stigma of having experienced sexualized violence. Our program attends hospitals, but, of course, we have to be asked to come. There is a fairly good follow-through between folks we have seen at hospital and folks who use our crisis lines. There is a bit of a disconnect, I think, between those numbers and the demographics with respect to who comes to ongoing counselling, which I think speaks to sort of what Alisa was talking about in terms of engagement with community and knowing that the services are there so someone can even think about reaching out to them.
I think it goes back to money for engagement, as even Dr. Van Lieshout was talking about, in terms of preventive care. That is also about public education and building relationships with communities and having the funding to run programs like that and the ability to—given our own knowledge of what is needed on the ground floor, at the sort of boots-on-the-field level—direct money to where those things are going to make the most impact.