I think there are two issues. There are people who respond perfectly by the book as per the evidence, and after 12 or 13 sessions they get well. However, when I was in the U.S. last week, they were talking about a large centre where their completion rate for the therapy was only 18%. Everybody else was dropping out from the rigorously evidence-based treatments, so we've already adapted our therapies to slow things down a little and give people more time for stabilization and those kinds of things.
There are people who respond very well initially; luckily, people are coming forward more than ever. There are people who have a partial response, and these are people we hope stay in the military, although maybe not in their profession. Then there's a group that doesn't respond well, so we try multiple different treatments.
Other than that, I think the important thing that we do in conjunction with Veterans Affairs is the transition toward civilian life. There are the JPSUs and case management. As we're looking at spending some of the additional funds, we're thinking about occupational therapy coming back into the fold for us beyond the two that we have to help people with vocational rehab transition. These are young veterans; these are people in their twenties and thirties with young families, so we want to give them the best transition to life.