Telemental health is a system that we put in place a couple of years ago. It enables clinicians to remotely provide care to mental health patients.
We always have another health care provider on location with the patient who is receiving care so that should they develop some issues as a result of the therapy they undergo—because sometimes that kind of exposure therapy makes them relive some of the traumas they experienced that have caused their illness—we have somebody there with them. It provides a method of delivering care when we can't have a mental health care provider geographically located with the patient.
It's well received by patients. The clinicians have a little harder time doing it because they feel that they need to have that face-to-face contact, but once they've done it for a while, they enjoy it.
In terms of virtual reality, we have a couple of different programs that we're looking at. We have a small system, a headgear that helps replicate the kinds of things that people are exposed to when they're on operations, but we also have a larger system that we're using, and we're in collaboration with the Dutch on a study to look at a different way to use virtual reality to treat patients with post-traumatic stress disorder that is starting to show some success. We're anxiously awaiting further results from that study.