Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I commend my colleagues for their excellent questions, and Dr. Brillon, your responses have been very helpful.
In simplest terms for us, mostly novices at this issue, we see something that happens physically--a gunshot wound or something broken--and in a comparative way that's what's happening in the head. Something has been broken. From your experience, can you quantify and say that half of the time or three-quarters of the time we can, by interventions, make people better again? Is there enough commonality among the cases? Is every case unique, or is there enough commonality among the different PTSD cases that you could say, if we put the typical victim on this regime of repair, most of the time they're going to come out okay?
I'd like your thoughts on that.