No. The only concern I would have is any identification, that you're going to identify a child with a trauma, that you're going to isolate them to become identified as the child of a parent with a mental health issue.
A couple of years ago, there was a little girl in Borden—I don't know if you recall. Her dad was deployed. She was called to the principal's office for some unrelated matter, but she fainted, because when they called her to the office, she thought they were calling her to tell her that her father had passed away. So this is the trauma, the level of trauma, that these children are living with.
These children are watching war like never before. They're seeing first-hand what's going on, unlike when my dad was in the military or World War II veterans. We didn't see war the way we're seeing it now. These children know first-hand what their parents are experiencing, and the level of stress they're under I don't think can be underestimated.