Thank you, Madam Chair.
I want to thank all of the witnesses for participating again in our committee meeting, and I apologize for the difficulties we experienced on Monday.
Colonel Jetly, again, congratulations. I've had the pleasure of working with you for almost a decade. I remember with fondness our travels across the country when I was parliamentary secretary. We were trying reach out to our troops to deal with their injuries and illnesses and the supports they were receiving in the Canadian Armed Forces. Some of those conversations were difficult, but I think we learned a lot from that.
Now that you're looking at parting ways with the armed forces and moving into the private sector, when you look back on your 30-plus years as one of the lead psychiatrists, and for at least the last decade the lead psychiatrist in the Canadian Armed Forces.... I know that in some of the early conversations we had, there wasn't even clinical terminology around PTSD for what it encompassed and how it manifested. Can you talk to how mental health has changed, from the standpoint of treatment and the science, in your time of service, up to where we are today?
I know we established the centre of excellence at the Royal to help our current serving members and our veterans deal with post-traumatic stress disorder and other operational stress injuries. I am wondering if you could talk about how things have changed in the last decade for sure, but also over the course of your career.