My question also dealt with soldiers who are deployed on the theatre of operations. A physician would not go so far as calling in Canada to ask whether he or she can prescribe medication. It is up to him to decide.
When they are on the theatre of operations, they are submitted to a level of stress that they don't have here. The stress level is different over there. Here, you can shoot someone with blanks and you know the person will not die. Over there, it is quite another story.
I am talking about medication and antidepressant prescriptions. Are physicians more inclined to prescribe antidepressants when they are on the theatre of operations, as compared with what they prescribe when they are in Canada?