 There are, of course, mental issues related to COVID in Cambodia as well as people. They lost jobs, they lost incomes, they lost their loved ones. A lot of patients of mine had relapsed during this first eight months. In 2021, we have more than 2,000 cases of counselling, three times the numbers that we have last year. But I think it's maybe only a tip of the icebergs. Cambodia has been through suffering from war, from the genocide, Khmer rule, and then war again. A lot of things trigger the memory of the past in relation to COVID. For example, during the lockdown, the city was quiet. People cannot travel from one place to another. And people think that, wow, this is like Numpen under the Khmer rules. I think it's not only clients, some general public older people also make this kind of connection. Providing online counselling is not new for TPO. Prior to COVID, we have a hotline counselling for a stop suicide program which is funded by the Australian government. When the COVID starts, we have experience in working with people through online or virtually. So we are starting to implement that straight away. I think there are a lot of people outside Numpen who need mental support, but there is no support available. Mental health has not been a priority. But I think everyone needs mental care. In 1992, I was a junior doctor working in the rural area. And I see people with mental health problems, schizophrenic patients. I start to wonder what kind of problem is this. There was no psychiatrist, no professor survived who can teach us. In 2008, I had the opportunity to get the Australian Award Scholarship. This helped me to look at mental health in terms of cultures. The mental health issue, a lot of times, is related to the cultural belief. When people believe in something, their mental health presentation or mental health reactions is according to their belief, their culture. We need to continue to offer hotlines because when people who desperately needed someone to talk to and when they have someone to talk to, it can save their life. Because when someone who wants to commit suicide, if no one cannot listen to them or no one that they cannot talk to, I think they may feel that this is the end of their world so they may commit suicide. And we save their lives through listening to them. That's why it keeps us motivating to do this work. Without TPO, there is no other service that these people can turn to. If we don't do it, nobody will do it. It is not easy, you know, from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. They feel tired. Sometimes they want to give up. We have peer support and we have regular meetings so that people can express their feelings as well. This kind of peer support helps them overcome their vicarious traumatization that they may receive from their client. At the moment, there are not many counsellors in Cambodia. After COVID, I think these types of people, counsellors, social workers, need to be trained to offer the mental health service to the people.