Definitely before. There's all this community health. You could have advertisements on TV every night to stop smoking, but it's when I get my patient in front of me and I give him the rules. So I think individual screening....
Of course, with military and police positions, we know the risk. It's known. We've assessed the hazard for a long time. There's training. So we have a good passing grade with regard to these pre-deployment medical assessments, physical and psychological, which are working in reducing the outcome of disease. I'm talking about from a heart attack to if the guy's not physically in shape, etc. For example, if a police officer has asthma and I give him poivre de Cayenne, he has an asthma attack and he's useless. So this is a fait accompli. So these three deployment tests are good.
Psychologically, as you know, the RCMP has been doing that since 1998, so we have close to 10 years of that. We feel that it's been maintained.