It's hard to comment on a specific report without knowing the authors' methodology. In general, what I can say about psychiatric care overall is that in the civilian world and military world, we have a long way to go. I think our evidence-based treatments, if we're lucky, whether it's civilian depression or PTSD, help 50% to 60% of people. A significant number of people don't benefit. I don't know if that's a specific military thing. We do have evidence that combat-related PTSD tends to respond less often, whether we're talking about Australia, Canada or the U.S., than civilian PTSD with the proper evidence-based treatment.
I absolutely 100% concede that more treatments and better treatments are needed, which is why continuing to do research and continuing to finding novel treatments is important. I just can't specifically comment on the report.