I'm a big believer in education. I believe the more we can get out there to our parents, to our coaches, to our trainers such that they're aware of that.... The risk you have is that, as practitioners have seen, you'll get someone who walks in your door, and they've gone on the Internet, and they've seen something, and they have that symptom because they saw it on the Internet or their next door neighbour had the same symptoms. Oftentimes, while Fred next door may have it, that doesn't necessarily mean that you have it.
With that said, Dr. Zemek, I'm so happy to see you talk about injuries. I think you said 25% of concussions are actually outside of the sports realm, which is good, because we need to recognize that for the general population as well. I'll throw my wife under the bus here, because she tripped over the blue line and hit her head when we were in one of our practices with our kids, and she didn't have a helmet on. You do see that, and unfortunately for her, she suffered a concussion, and it had a huge impact on her for a good three or four months.
Those are big challenges that we have, and you mentioned that the good news is that people are getting better. You talked about a three-month time frame if I remember correctly. Do we know what percentages go past those three months?