I admit that I may have lost track of one or more of them, but to work backwards, no, I'm convinced that the differences between our own suicide experience and that of the U.S. military are not due to differences in technical ways of counting the events. We do them slightly differently, but that's not accounting for that. That's easy, I think, to dismiss.
I also share your perspective, which other people have pointed out, which is that you might expect that the suicide rate in the military would be lower than that of civilians because it's a selected population and it has access to care. We don't have the numbers that we would be able to start teasing all that apart in trying to understand that, unfortunately. We're really going to have to rely upon other people, in the States, for example, where they have enough numbers that they could actually start to sort that out.
I'm sorry, that's two out of your five questions and I've lost track.