What I would give is just general impressions. There are lots of people going through Afghanistan, so you see more of it.
On the screening that we do post-deployment, we get more coming in, whereas before, as Dr. Brunet's study in 2002 showed, a lot of people wouldn't even recognize they had a problem, so how could they go for help? This way they're recommended for a follow-up, and it's written down. They have to see their MO, they have to go in, they have to get told. So we're seeing a lot more people.
The more we know about the mission, the more people know what to expect. For missions like Rwanda, like Somali, for different tours in the Balkans, I think maybe people weren't expecting those things, and so in some ways it was more difficult for them. The popular perception of what a deployment is like is different now here in Canada, I think, with Afghanistan from what it was on those previous deployments. So a person is probably feeling better supported here in Canada now than perhaps on one of those previous deployments.