Overwhelming, yes; and that's why in complex cases, where clients are in great need and at high risk, they want to reduce the numbers.
My comment was that if one case manager manages 30 clients, in that sense, she still has to work with an individual team with each individual client. So one client might have a PT or OT nurse on it, another might have a social worker, or a speech pathologist. Each team would be different people with different areas. And because they are not in the same geographic area—it's a population-based approach—each case manager would have a team from a variety of professionals.
So that's what I mean. It is one case manager working with 30 clients, but each client is separately attended to in terms of the service plan and the interdisciplinary team that she works with.