I'll just speak to the prevention side.
We've studied both women officers and men officers. We've hooked them up with the biological data. We find that when they're starting to encounter training or real-world critical incidents, all of their physiological responses and stress hormones—cortisol and adrenaline—as well as heart rate and breathing, can skyrocket similarly. They're very intense depending on the complexity of the situation. So those are similar. I would recommend that any intervention before they get OSI and PTSD and use-of-force training would be similar, but I think it may be different for treatment afterwards.