Here's the thing, and I'm sorry if I sound kind of preachy. I always say everybody is coping. We are all coping with kids, interpersonal relationships, financial stuff, career stuff, everything. We're going along and we're coping. Some are coping better; some are not coping so well.
How do you know if a person is coping well or not? They either have to declare that they're not coping well or they get into trouble--driving while impaired, spousal violence, or legal stuff that occurs, and then the chain of command becomes aware that somebody is there. Or a member says, “Gee, I went home last night and yelled at my kids, and my wife pointed it out to me. Can I get some help here?” So he shows up at the medical side. Now if he shows up on the medical side, we don't tell the commanding officers and everybody else that this guy is here for help, because we see that as a positive. We then apply the appropriate diagnostic sort of criteria, tests, to see what the problem is, and then we determine if it's an addiction or whatever.
That's how things happen. That's why I said it's the individual who determines when they need some sort of support. We don't go around and try to find people. We have general screening processes. The pilots always had pilot sort of stuff because the Aeronautics Act says we're supposed to check a pilot on a regular basis. That was never applied to the army guys.
Now we are applying a two-year periodic health evaluation that is tied and focused on whatever stage in life you happen to be at. So if you're a young guy, we focus on those things that young people do. If you're a 40-year-old, we're going into cholesterol and your cardiac risk factors and stuff. The periodic health evaluation is sort of focused now on that—