Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Since the beginning of our troops going to Afghanistan back in 2001 until now, we've seen a complete 180 in terms of how the military views operational stress injuries. Back then it was matter of sucking it up and ignoring it, to the complete opposite now when you're supposed to be recognizing in yourself when it's time to seek help. We introduced along the way the decompression phase because families were telling us that the troops were coming home too soon, that they need a little bit of time before they're brought back into the family and the community. There was still one further point to go and that was to have the observations of any potential problems in theatre and operations. Can you tell us what steps are taken when a platoon is on an operation and there's somebody who is impacted or showing signs of a potential OSI?