Okay, got you.
We're just getting up on that five-year window now. Let me start with a really basic fact about PTSD and that whole constellation of illnesses. We know that of everyone we send to Afghanistan, 6% are going to have mental health issues. We know that 2% of these, one-third, are going to get better on their own; 2% are going to get better with treatment; and 2% are probably going to have long-term issues. I want to re-emphasize the importance of making people understand that we have the best mental health care post-deployment system in the world, and we really need to access that middle 2% who are going to get better with treatment. We need to access them quickly. We also need to access, equally quickly, the 2% who are probably going to have long-term issues, so that we can minimize the effects of their illness.
The reality is that 94% of us come through it, and that's what I'm seeing, anecdotally. Here in Sudbury, where I am, I have a reserve unit that sends dozens of people every year to Afghanistan. I talk to these guys all the time, and the vast majority are doing just great. That's the reality.