Yes, I'm sorry. If I may, I only have seven minutes here, Colonel, and I want to quote Greg Lubimiv, the executive director of the Phoenix Centre, which provides mental health services, including at Petawawa. He says the majority of treatment for PTSD should happen at the family level, not as secondary to individual care. He says that It's at the family level that the situation starts to break down, and he goes on to talk about that. This is in a news article in The Globe and Mail.
Given that, how can we say, “Oh well, it's not our fault, the Constitution stops us from helping families”? Is that the situation? Is it because health care is a provincial matter that we can't provide services to families of soldiers who have PTSD?