No, I understand, but a lot of times, especially in rural communities, the family physician may not be the first access they might have. Speaking as a chiropractor who has dealt with a lot of veterans over the years, oftentimes I've had those individuals in my office dealing specifically with what I deal with in mechanical issues, but the reality is oftentimes they are expressing other things to me that would be of benefit to me as a practitioner because I might be the sole source they have.
There was a time in Estevan, Saskatchewan, when we had five doctors, so I was seeing medical situations that were outside my scope, but people were coming to me because I could get those people to where they needed to be, they had an avenue.
In a lot of rural communities, those aspects are there, and the practitioners who are there whether they are occupational therapists or physical therapists have some of that background and some of that training that they can utilize those skills. Those skills, if they had that outreach to them, would be of great benefit for our veterans so they could expand on that, and maybe get them to where they need to be, and assist them in those programs.
I'm wondering if that was consulted on or discussed, or is it something that could be looked at?