Our experience in the disability community is that poverty rates more generally are at least twice as high as those in the average population. We do know that with the greater occurrence of aging there is a greater incidence of poverty given the minimized opportunities that people have at an older age.
For the younger generations, we are gradually seeing some increase in the prosperity of people who experience a spinal cord injury, but quite often it is many, many years out. I don't have a particular percentage in terms of that, but it's at least double what we would see for the regular population, with higher percentages experienced in the aging population with spinal cord injury.