On your first question, I think the observation is very valid. I'd just make a couple of points.
There was a recent research initiative in Australia that came out with some really interesting statistics around Korean veterans. They found that there was indeed a very significant increase in the number of Korean veterans coming forward with mental health conditions about fifty years after the conflict. These were individuals who had returned from Korea, had married, had successful business careers and successful family life, and apparently no issues, but they reached a point in their life, perhaps when they started to reflect back on their life, and suddenly PTSD started to appear in fairly significant numbers. That's one point.
The second point is what we're seeing in our OSI clinics as well, which we thought would be primarily the Canadian Forces veterans. We are seeing a fairly significant number of war service veterans, and Korea veterans as well, coming forward with very complex mental health conditions, very late in life. That's a reality that we are living at this point.
I'm not sure, Raymond, if you want to add anything to that.