Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Alice, thank you for coming today. I'm struck, when I look at the materials, by all the logos at the bottom. I know you said 25, but the graphic here is quite something. Congratulations to you for pulling all these organizations into one institute.
I was interested in the study reference on the incidence of PTSD and how the effects of service for veterans kind of manifest themselves in the U.S., Canada, and the U.K. I have two questions about that. First, was there an explanation offered in the study for the differences? Canada, for example, has half the incidence of PTSD but so much more depression.
Second, with that in mind, I'm wondering whether this phenomenal amount of research going on in these institutes is making its way from that research field and the academics into the Canadian Forces health system. For example, when one looks at this study and sees the incidence of depression, is that research impacting on the kinds of services being offered, such as suicide prevention or something like that, in the Canadian Forces? Are we seeing that kind of translation?