That's a great question. Thank you for that.
I think part of it is to separate normal from disease. Having raised two girls, and continuing to raise—I guess you never stop—two girls through this whole period.... One is 20 and one is 18. The problem is that we have these classifications of diseases. If you are in this check box and you have these symptoms, then you have a disease. However, people are so different.
Let's take depression. With a 56-year-old post-menopausal woman who is sleeping 18 hours a day, eating carbohydrates and gaining weight, and a 19-year-old male student who is losing weight and can't sleep, we call it the same disease and often give them the same medication. We have to understand the differences and individualize things. I think what is normal, what is not normal, and when it is a disease are almost three different categories. I think that's really important.
I'm going to quickly jump in for my friend, Peter. The interesting thing in the Netherlands is that it's 0.05% the size of Ontario. The beauty of the Netherlands is that every single soldier in their military is within two hours' train ride to the Central Military Hospital.
This is the problem we face. I'm in the NATO group quite often, and the Canadian solution is going to be different. We can borrow and help.... If you think about a map, it's smaller than southern Ontario.