I'm going to go a bit more macro.
We talk about being invisible, and I can give examples of research. You have to do research on this. The numbers are too statistically small to track, but it's being used to not do anything. We have to move beyond that. This is where you start partnering with other nations to see how they're tracking things—the U.S., for example. That's why we talked about the board. You start there.
If Canada is truly committed to their women veterans—it's all veterans, but I need to talk about women—we will take those statistics, blend them with what we have and start. Even if we overprogram to begin with and we move back afterwards.... If you build it, they will come.
I would suggest that we not accept these statistically insignificant numbers we often get in research, whether it's women suicide in the Canadian Armed Forces or as veterans. If there is a way of building a recommendation into research that says statistically insignificant numbers are not an excuse to do nothing—that has so many negatives, and I'm sorry—we can then look at getting boards together and partnering with other nations so we can at least start somewhere.