Yes, I think we do. Again, I'm going to talk about mental illness care writ large across the world, more than picking on the Canadian Armed Forces.
I think we have a traditional model of face-to-face care—“I'll see you every Tuesday at nine o'clock for an hour”—and a lot of that is an accident of how long it takes the earth to spin on its axis and how long it takes the world to go around. If we were on another planet, it would be 30-hour sessions every year.
I think we can leverage technology. I think we can put into people's hands information and self-help, because, number one, people have told us that they don't have an illness, but they also resoundingly say, both in civilian society and in the military, “I'd like to be able to handle things myself.”
I think we need to really leverage technology and give people the tools. Also, they can come to us. They can say, “Hey, Doc, I tried all of that stuff, but it's not working.” I think that would be the way of giving it that 24-7 kind of approach as well.