What's exciting about it, Anita, is that really it began just five or six years ago with “one-stop” in VanGran, and it is now up to 25 sites. It is the future, because it's a stepped-care model. People get the most appropriate care in the most appropriate place by the most appropriate provider at the most appropriate time. One of the appropriate places is virtual.
As that young person walks in the door, they're greeted by a peer support person, someone with lived and living experience. They have a primary care provider. If they need a social worker, a psychologist, or an addiction medicine specialist, even virtually or online, or they need help with housing, help with education or help getting a job, it's all uniquely wrapped around and integrated into the rest of the system. If they've been to emergency on Friday night, their primary care provider knows that. This is what we have to do.
I have to say, Anita, that, as you know, our friend Dr. Karen Breeck, as the physician for the Snowbirds, once asked me why the veterans didn't have this. I hope one day we'll be able to get that kind of wraparound support for everybody.
What's also exciting is that this is for ages 12 to 25. It means that there's already a consensus that you can't let kids drop off the map at 18 in a pediatric setting. This is right to 25. It includes a lot of their challenges post-secondary or other challenges they're facing, including gender identity.