Yes, I'm always concerned when I read reports on it. It's important to not hide these statistics or anything like that, but sometimes the same reports then don't detail treatment options, such as the Veterans Transition Network and some programs you run. The reports provide just the sad end of someone, not the treatments that we should have been promoting.
I may share my time with Ms. Gallant. In my next few minutes, I'd like to discuss one thing I struggled with when I was minister. That was the concept that some families, first responders or military, would like to see a monument to people who served but who died via suicide. I struggled with that personally. To some families who want to know their member is remembered, they see this as a way to do that. But my fear, and I told them this, was that this could lead to more families going through the turmoil they were facing, because a monument like that could be something that pushes someone who's struggling over the end, thinking if they take this route, they'll be remembered through this monument.
Could you comment on that?