Absolutely, yes. There's no script for trauma. Trauma is something that happens in the body, and there's no unit of measure that you can use. It doesn't matter if you're a combat soldier or a cook or a clerk. It doesn't matter. Trauma occurs.
With the veterans transition program, I've worked with more non-combat military members in the Atlantic because they're predominately navy and air force. However, you're also dealing with things like the Swissair crash, which has had a profound effect on non-combat military members, but nobody seems to think that, because they say, “Well, you're not in combat, so what's wrong?” There are so many things that our men and women in the military have done that people don't necessarily see, but it has a traumatic effect on them.
Yes, I do see them coming in, and they have a need, and the program works really well. It also works really well with different experiences. You can have a combat veteran and you can have somebody who's never been in combat come together because of trauma, and the shared experience is the fact they have gone through trauma and they can help each other through.