I can give you a very quick response, Mr. Chair.
I think the essence of this, the critical point, is awareness. We go out of our way to make sure the families are briefed from the beginning--throughout our training, during our deployments, and afterwards--so that they're aware of all of the resources and capabilities we have. If a soldier is injured, we automatically put an officer with that family. We make them aware of all the resources we have. We connect them with the medical people, our mental health capabilities, our specialists, and if something does happen, everybody is aware of everything that's happening. It's a tight family.
These are examples, I guess.... We're not doing it in every case, but I'll tell you, we go out of our way to make sure that the families.... I speak to families. I talk to soldiers. I debrief soldiers. My commanding officers do, my NCOs do. We go out of our way to make sure that we do that. We will continue to improve our outreach and our means of making sure that the families are aware. The families need to continue to come to us if they're not getting the complete information that they'd like.