I tried to do it, but I find it odd that a survey that is measuring access to mental health will not let you complete it if you have not accessed help in the last 12 months.
Would you not want to know if someone was perhaps trying to access, or had issues accessing and were not able to find help in those 12 months? That seems like the target people if you are trying to measure accessibility for mental health, as that would imply that's where the system has failed. Lots of people out there rarely seek or get the help.
Maybe I missed the point of the survey?
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