If you're referring specifically to having them in uniform or to being uniformed members of the Canadian Forces, our guiding principle essentially is that unless there is a direct operational employment for them, i.e., an overseas deployment, we normally will not put a profession or occupation into uniform. That, at the end of the day, is the primary purpose of having a uniformed health service. It's to provide the care where normally you cannot buy it or procure it in some other manner, either from a host nation or, potentially, allies.
Again, I am not a clinician, so I can't really speak from that perspective with respect to whether or not chiropractors can or cannot deal with more acute injuries. Our entire focus, when it comes to delivering operational health services—that is to say deployed health services—is on timelines. If an individual can be returned to full operational duty within a specific period of time, then they stay in theatre and are treated. If they cannot be, then they are evacuated out of theatre to Canada or another location where they can receive the appropriate level of care.