Yes, and that's what I was just saying. Mental health is a small percentage.
On the other end there are the SCAN seminars. There are a lot of educational programs that can give you the different options out there, and that's something any military person being released can then access.
The gap we've identified is that there's an in-between place. People can come out, they can know cognitively what all the different occupations available to them are, yet there's this psychological transition, this identity transition, that seems to be missing. This is what we're hoping our program can fill. It's something that hasn't really shown up before. We haven't had such a blending of the mental health issues from places like Afghanistan and other overseas missions with the general transitions where people retire from the forces without having experienced stressful or traumatic events.
I think you bring up a great point. It is something we're trying to say. Whatever it is, 10%, 20%, or 30% who have PTSD, it's an important population to pay attention to. Of the people releasing though, 80% could benefit from a program like ours. They don't have a diagnosis, yet they are struggling with who they are going to be once they leave.