Thank you for the question.
Occupational therapists are trained in both mental health and physical medicine. I think what's important is the model of practice they come from. I'll give you the simplified version of the model: the person, the environment, and the occupation, or the task they must do. The lens through which they look at the person looks at that person in total. We look at what the mental health is of the person, what the physical health is, as they engage in the occupations in the variety of environments that they must be in. That would be the work environment, the play environment, the family environment. They combine, and that becomes the lens.
In terms of training for PTSD and OSI injuries, absolutely; that's included in our curriculum. I happen to teach that curriculum, so I know what's included in the curriculum. We're seeing this as an increased practice, more and more.
We have to recognize that one in five Canadians has a mental health issue anyway. That means four in five Canadians are supporting somebody with a mental health issue.
I often do the exercise of asking how many people are in the room, because if we do that countdown, that's how many people--