I would say that OSR is an umbrella term. Again, with women, and sometimes with men too, there is an aspect of MST that we address. Typically, I don't know that we....
We're very holistic in terms of how we integrate things. It's not like we have a unit on MST; it's integrated throughout the program in the individual counselling and the kinds of activities people do, such as yoga or equine therapy for trauma and that kind of thing. It's addressing the trauma. It could be going back to things earlier in life and self-regulation training so that people can manage the triggers, which have been alluded to, around things like that. There's psycho-education about that. Certainly, knowledge is power.
There are also some strategies about how to deal with that and move forward in a more positive way so that people don't feel victimized—they feel empowered.
That's a bit of a vague answer. The best way I can describe it is that we don't have one afternoon devoted to MST; it permeates throughout the program. We have women therapists and women's programs. It's all women working with women, which seems to work best with MST.