Yes, sir. If I can just explain, the medical support in theatre for combat troops is really categorized. There are three hierarchies of medical support. At the very front, at the fighting edge, in your example, a patrol that would leave a forward operating base outside the wire is a company with at least one medic per platoon as well as a number of soldiers, at a ratio of one to ten, who have advanced tactical combat care training or advanced first aid.
The next level of support is our forward role, two-unit medical station, which would be, if you could envision, a mini MASH unit. These would be pushed forward enough--in the case of Medusa I had them pushed forward on my two axes of attack--so they were never more than three or four kilometres from the front line where the fighting was occurring. And this organization had either a doctor in it or a physician's assistant and a number of medics who could provide a fairly high degree of stabilization support for a casualty before they were put onto an air medevac system and flown back to Kandahar airfield, which is considered our role 3 facility, which has all the combat medical support you'd find in any hospital in Canada.