Absolutely, we recognize that need to provide the education before they go. I think most of you will have seen the little booklets we've handed around as part of a six-phase pre- and post-deployment education program, where we actually spend a full day with all troops before they go overseas and we talk about mental health. We talk about what will be the behaviours that they'll see in themselves and their buddies—not the diagnostic symptoms but the actual behaviour they'll see in somebody they work with every day—and then we talk about what they can do either as a buddy or as a leader to support that person who may be struggling. Very simple early non-medical interventions can be very effective when they're out there and away from immediate medical resources.
What we're finding is that with the pre-deployment training, as well as the transition and reintegration training we provide in Cypress, soldiers are now coming into mental health services much earlier than they used to. In the early 2000s, they were waiting about five to seven years after they noticed they were struggling with an issue. Now at about the three- to six-month mark, about 50% of those who could benefit from treatment during their screening have already sought care on their own. So we're seeing a big shift towards earlier recognition and earlier acceptance that, okay, they do need to get some help and they'll go and get that. It tends to be more effective when they come and get that treatment earlier.