Thank you, Mr. Chair.
A number of months ago, on CBC television, there was a GP interviewed whose son had been to Afghanistan. This particular individual asked to go on CBC with his story. Apparently, when his son came back, he was an entirely different person, with personality changes. His father didn't know exactly what was wrong with him, but nobody would believe that there was anything wrong with him. He couldn't get anybody to respond, so he went public with it.
What happened after, I'm not sure. I'm trying to track him down to see if he was responded to.
We talk about people who refuse to admit it, but here was somebody who was crying out for help and wasn't getting it. How many others are there? Is there any documentation on how many people? To this point, 13,000 people have served in Afghanistan. How many of those really want to be treated and are not able to get it?