We work very closely with our partners in health services. We sit on the same committees. We do research together. I work with them. I left the military, but I didn't leave the building where I worked. To their great despair, I still hang around. I walk into the director of mental health's office whenever anything crosses my desk that I think they should know about. We talk to each other on a daily basis. They know that.
To your point, what I would like to point out is that—and this is what our research has shown us, the life after service study—people come to us at different times. Some people come to us strictly, directly from the military. The military hands them over to us. We know they're going to be released. We take them on into our OSI clinics. Some people come to us years after they left because they hear about this, and they say, “I think I have a problem and I think it's related to my deployment”, and they come back to us. They come to us over their lifetime, when they leave. We have 25% who come immediately after service; and 75% over 40 years.