We are certainly better off today than we were five years ago. Five-plus years ago, in 2000, we began a project called Rx2000, and part of that project involved a massive undertaking of refurbishing and improving the services we deliver at home.
To give you some examples, in the past on many of our bases all there would be would be uniformed personnel. There might be a base surgeon and two or three physicians and uniformed technicians. The vast majority of our facilities now have over 50% civilians in them, and there are two to three times as many personnel in there, nurses, nurse practitioners, physicians, psycho-social supports, whether it's psychologists, social workers, etc., to meet the needs of our personnel. That's all a direct result of the project that we've been putting in place in the last five and half years.
I say putting in place--it's still actively engaged, still ongoing, and we're enhancing the improvements to it all the time. It still has a few more years to go before it's completely in place. But just like the competition for uniformed health care providers, the competition for civilian health care providers in many of our locations is just as difficult. However, it's vastly improved from where it was in the days when the general and I here were actually seeing patients.